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Published in: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science 2/2019

21-11-2018 | Original Empirical Research

Enhancing consumer engagement in an online brand community via user reputation signals: a multi-method analysis

Authors: Sara Hanson, Lan Jiang, Darren Dahl

Published in: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | Issue 2/2019

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Abstract

Generating and maintaining consumers’ engagement in online brand communities is critical for marketing managers to enhance relationships and gain customer loyalty. In this research, we investigate how the type of signal used to indicate user reputation can enhance (or diminish) consumers’ community engagement. Specifically, we explore differences in perceptions of points (i.e., point accrual systems), labels (i.e., descriptive, hierarchical identification systems), and badges (i.e., descriptive, horizontally-ordered identification systems). We argue that reputation signals vary in the degree to which they can provide role clarity—the presence of user roles that deliver information about expected behaviors within a group. Across several studies, including a natural experiment using panel data, a survey of community members, and two controlled experiments, we show that signals that evoke a positive social role have the ability to drive greater engagement (i.e., creating discussions, posting comments, and future engagement intentions) than signals that do not provide role clarity. The effect is moderated by user tenure, such that new consumers’ engagement is particularly influenced by signal type. These findings have important implications for marketers as they use reputation signals as a strategic tool when managing online communities.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
In a small percentage of cases, the highest performing community members were also provided with a “Pillar” icon that indicated their high status in the community.
 
2
We compared the dataset with incompletes to the dataset of completes to ensure that the distribution of members along the user tenure variable was similar and that there was no apparent selection bias. The distribution proved to be very similar with frequencies within 1–2%. We also compared early responders to late responders and found no significant difference in responses.
 
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Metadata
Title
Enhancing consumer engagement in an online brand community via user reputation signals: a multi-method analysis
Authors
Sara Hanson
Lan Jiang
Darren Dahl
Publication date
21-11-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science / Issue 2/2019
Print ISSN: 0092-0703
Electronic ISSN: 1552-7824
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-018-0617-2

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