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Erschienen in: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science 3/2023

20.01.2023 | Original Empirical Research

Non-face emojis in digital marketing: Effects, contingencies, and strategic recommendations

verfasst von: Davide Christian Orazi, Bhoomija Ranjan, Yimin Cheng

Erschienen in: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | Ausgabe 3/2023

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Abstract

Non-face (NF) emojis are increasingly used to complement or substitute words in digital marketing messages, yet the effects, mechanisms, and contingencies of this communication strategy remain underexplored. In a large-scale longitudinal study of Airbnb listings, we show that NF emojis (vs. simple text) lead to an increase in eWOM volume, an effect we replicate experimentally. This effect is qualified by important boundary conditions whose underlying mechanisms are investigated in two additional experimental studies. At the message level, using multiple substitutive (vs. complementary) NF emojis reduces message evaluations and eWOM volume due to reduced processing fluency. At the source level, seller quality further moderates the interaction between emoji function and emoji number: for premium sellers, using multiple NF emojis reduces message evaluations and eWOM volume irrespective of their function due to reduced perceptions of competence. We distill these findings into detailed managerial guidelines for using NF emojis in digital marketing.

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Fußnoten
1
Since hosts may choose not to host their property in specific months, this is an unbalanced time-series panel.
 
2
These characteristics are always mentioned on the Airbnb listing page. However, hosts can choose to highlight a few characteristics in the listing title. There are multiple online tutorials for Airbnb hosts on how to structure listing titles. For instance, see https://​www.​hostyapp.​com/​airbnb-titles/​
 
3
Technically, Airbnb has classified emojis in titles as a “content policy violation”. However, this is not strictly imposed, and we find listings with emojis in titles throughout our sample period.
 
4
In our data, approximately 2% of monthly listings titles use both complementary and substitutive NF emojis conditional on NF emoji usage. In these cases, we code “1” for both the “complementary” and “substitutive” NF presence variables.
 
5
More precisely, emoji number signifies the number of words/concepts in the listing title (“low” vs. “high”) that have been complemented or substituted with emojis. For e.g. when “★★★★★” is used to complement or substitute the word “5-star” in “a ★★★★★ hotel”, emoji number is coded as 1 rather than 5. Model results are robust to either way of coding nonetheless.
 
6
Airbnb reviews also minimize the problem of fake reviews, which is a major issue in other review formats (Luca & Zervas, 2016), as only patrons who have completed a trip can leave reviews for the listing.
 
7
Note that eWOM valence and variance are other metrics worthy of examination. However, in our data context, over 70% observations have ratings above 90% and therefore show little variance in valence.
 
8
Our full dataset consists of 2.38 M observations of monthly listings for 195,733 unique properties. We are left with the final panel of 2.18 M observations after removing the first month for each property.
 
9
Both emoji presence and number variables (complementary/substitutive) are dummy variables. Therefore, a listing with a single (complementary/substitutive) NF emoji will have presence = 1 and number = 0, and a listing with multiple (complementary/substitutive) NF emojis will have both presence = 1 and number = 1. Hence, emoji presence (when combined with emoji number) identifies the effect of a single (complementary/substitutive) NF emoji relative to text.
 
10
Note that Eq. (3) is estimated with the full set of instruments, exogenous variables \({Z}_{it}\) and fixed effects for each endogenous variable in the set \({W}_{it}\) in the first stage.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Non-face emojis in digital marketing: Effects, contingencies, and strategic recommendations
verfasst von
Davide Christian Orazi
Bhoomija Ranjan
Yimin Cheng
Publikationsdatum
20.01.2023
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science / Ausgabe 3/2023
Print ISSN: 0092-0703
Elektronische ISSN: 1552-7824
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-022-00917-z

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