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Título
The differential impact of user- and firm-generated content on online brand advocacy: customer engagement and brand familiarity matter
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
User-generated content
Firm-generated content
Customer engagement
Online brand advocacy
Brand familiarity
Clasificación UNESCO
5311 Organización y Dirección de Empresas
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
Emerald
Citación
Aljarah, A., Sawaftah, D., Ibrahim, B., & Lahuerta-Otero, E. (2024). The differential impact of user- and firm-generated content on online brand advocacy: customer engagement and brand familiarity matter. European Journal of Innovation Management, 27(4), 1160-1181. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJIM-05-2022-0259
Resumen
[EN]Purpose – The aim of this study is first, to investigate the relative effect of user-generated content (UGC) and
firm-generated content (FGC) on online brand advocacy, and second, to examine the mediation effect of
customer engagement and the moderation effect of brand familiarity in the relationship between UGC and FGC
and online brand advocacy. The differential impact of UGC and FGC on consumer behavior has yet to receive
sufficient academic attention among hospitality scholars.
Design/methodology/approach – Based on social learning theory, cognitive consistency theory and
schema theory, this study established an integrated research framework to explain the relationship between
the constructs of the study. This study adopts a scenario-based experimental design in two separate studies
within contexts to examine the proposed hypotheses.
Findings – The results revealed that UGC is a stronger predictor of online brand advocacy than FGC.
A mediation analysis supported that the effect of digital content marketing types on online brand advocacy
occurs because of customer engagement. Further, when the brand was familiar, participants showed a higher
level of online brand advocacy than when they were exposed to FGC (vs. unfamiliar brand), whereas the effect
of familiar and unfamiliar brands on online brand advocacy remains slightly close to each other when the
participants were exposed to UGC. Brand familiarity positively enhanced participants’ engagement when they
were exposed to UGC. Further, customer engagement is only a significant mediator when the brand is
unfamiliar.
Practical implications – This paper presents significant managerial implications for hospitality companies
about how they can effectively enhance brand advocacy in the online medium.
Originality/value – This research provides a novel contribution by examining the differential impact of UGC
and FGC on online brand advocacy as well as uncovering the underlying mechanism of how and under what
conditions user- and firm-generated content promotes online brand advocacy in the hospitality context.
URI
ISSN
1460-1060
DOI
10.1108/EJIM-05-2022-0259
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