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2023 | Buch

The Effects of Impartiality Disclosure on Brand Objectives for No and Multiple Product Endorsements

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Regulation stipulates that social media Influencers on Instagram need to disclose sponsorship information when a relationship exists between the brand and the influencer. While influencers may simply use the Instagram disclosure label “Paid partnership with brand X”, others add additional messages or hashtags which express that the opinions voiced in Instagram posts are honest. This study examines how emphasizing “honest opinions” in sponsored and not sponsored Instagram posts affects consumers’ responses. Second, it explores if the influencers endorsing multiple products moderates the relationship between impartiality disclosure and credibility or ad perception. The results found that compared to the no disclosure condition, “This is not a sponsored post” diminishes consumers’ purchase intention. Further, it can support that perceived source credibility relates positively to purchase intention and that the use of “#honestopinion” diminishes advertising perception. A central finding is the existence of an indirect positive mediation effect of the impartiality disclosure “#honestopinion”, advertising disclosure and trustworthiness on purchase intention. Lastly, this study can support that a consumer’s attachment to an influencer has a positive impact on that consumer’s purchase intention.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

The Effects of Impartiality Disclosure on Brand Objectives as Research Objective

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction
Abstract
Recently, SMIs emerge who explicitly state that their social media content is not sponsored. This new phenomenon of "impartiality disclosure” necessitates more research in order to unveil the mechanisms behind SMIs impartial and partial brand communication.
Corina Oprea
Chapter 2. Relevance of Instagram Traffic for Brand Management
Abstract
In 2022 Instagram emerged as particularly adept at referring traffic from its network, towards the promoted websites. Its referral traffic soared when compared to Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook or Pinterest. These developments revert to Instagram’s ability to continuously increase the number of individuals using the platform.
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Chapter 3. Definition of Social Media Influencers and their Relevance for Brand Management
Abstract
“Social Media Influencers” (SMIs) became solely known through their online activities such as blogs, vlogs or Instagram posts. While celebrities are able to exert their influence online and offline, SMIs however are only able to mostly exert their influence online. Literature agrees that SMI endorsements differ from traditional celebrity endorsements, by creating opportunities for bidirectional interactions in which followers can comment on posts and receive replies from SMIs.
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Chapter 4. Impartiality Disclosure and Research Gap
Abstract
SMIs may use impartiality disclosure, despite posting a sponsored post, in order to underline their “honest” support for a product they truly believe in. Impartiality disclosure may be able to diminish the negative effect caused by ad disclosure and furthermore gain additional credibility for SMIs. However, from the perspective of consumer protection “honest opinion” can represent a serious threat. This may come to pass as the content presented by the SMI as “honest”, may not be sincere, but sponsored. An SMI has more than one way of conveying impartiality, namely via hashtag or via text.
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Chapter 5. Derivation of Research Gaps and Research Questions
Abstract
In aid of curent research shortcomings, the main objective of this thesis is to contribute to a deeper understanding of the effects of disclosure impartiality used by SMIs on brand objectives by answering two research questions. (1) What are the effects of different disclosure impartiality language (#honestopinion / impartiality text) on brand objectives? (2) How does the disclosure impartiality (#honestopinion / impartiality text) impact the brand objectives, in the case of SMIs that regularly post product endorsements, compared to SMIs that do not?
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Theoretical Foundations and Development of Research Model

Frontmatter
Chapter 6. Influencer Branding in Brand Management
Zusammenfassung
Research up to this point classifies SMIs as a category of opinion leaders, as they move within the bounds of social media. While opinion leaders are those members of a group who exert a stronger personal influence than others within the frame of the communication process and thus influence the opinion of other group members, SMIs can be employed as the voice of the brand. Due to the high trustworthiness and authenticity attributed by their followers, SMIs can act as an effective communication tool for swaying opinions, views and behaviors within the brands’ intended target audiences.
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Chapter 7. User-Generated-Content vs. Brand-Generated-Content in Influencer Marketing
Abstract
Consumers are progressively using social media networks to gain information regarding products. Word-of-mouth communication (WOM) in the online context becomes electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM). eWOM is no longer subject to geographical constraints and can extend to encompass a larger audience. As a result, brands are investing additional marketing resources into social media advertising strategies, as they offer an opportunity to reach a vast audience.
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Chapter 8. Influencer Marketing and Sponsorship Disclosure
Abstract
In order to make use of the full potential of social media in general and particularly Instagram, companies are using SMIs to promote their brands. DE VEIRMAN /HUDDERS (2020) underline the relevance of the disclosure problematic for SMIs.  Sponsorship disclosure is defined, for the purposes of this paper as labels, indications and cues that aid in unambiguously identifying the persuasion attempt in a commercial post. Hence, it is a declaration on the part of the SMI, that the published message has a commercial nature. This admission can occur as an additional message (including e.g., #advertisement or #sponsored), or as an Instagram standardized disclosure label).
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Chapter 9. Research Strains Regarding Sponsorship Disclosures in Influencer Marketing
Abstract
Considering the very particular research strain of influencer marketing, two main research streams can be identified. The (1) first research strain analyses the effects of the disclosure as such and thus focuses on contrasting disclosure vs. non-disclosure. This includes studies by DE JANS/CAUBERGHE/HUDDERS (2018), BOERMAN ET AL. (2017), KIM/KIM (2020), BECKERT ET AL. (2020), and BREVES (2021). The (2) second research stream investigates different types of disclosure such as different wording (e.g., EVANS ET AL. (2017) and DE VEIRMAN/HUDDERS (2020)) or timing (VAN REIJMERSDAL ET AL. (2020)).
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Chapter 10. Effects of SMI-Branding on Brand Objectives
Abstract
SMIs strive to formulate honest- and authentic-appearing messages. Thus, regardless if SMIs disclose the sponsorship or not they will strive to add persuasive, honest language to accompany their post with the aim of showing that they wholeheartedly support the brand used in the post. This means that academia needs to address the yet sparsely researched area of “honest opinion” impartiality disclosures.
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Chapter 11. Summary of Hypotheses
Abstract
The following chapter delivers a summarized overview of the previously derived hypotheses.
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Empirical Model Validation and Hypotheses Testing

Frontmatter
Chapter 12. Conceptualization and Requirements for the Experimental Research
Abstract
Experiments normally include one or more experimental conditions and one control condition. Through experiments we can observe whether the change in one dependent variable is caused by the change in a certain independent variable. These causal relationships can be predicted by employing experimental designs.
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Chapter 13. Experimental Study Design
Abstract
The following section describes the experimental study design employed in this paper. Appropriate stimuli are selected, the independent variable is manipulated and the dependent variable, mediators, moderators and control variables are operationalized.
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Chapter 14. Research Findings
Abstract
This chapter details the sample selection, data check and cleansing as well as manipulation check, realism check and the research methodology.
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Conclusion, Reflection and Outlook

Frontmatter
Chapter 15. Summary of Empirical Results and Discussion
Abstract
Based on the conceptual foundation and theoretical findings of the previous chapter, hypotheses were derived. In order to test these, we applied a 2 (“multiple product endorsement”: low versus high) x 4 (“disclosure type”: (a) #honestopinion, (b) This is not a sponsored post, (c) Paid partnership with the [brand] and the control group (d) no disclosure) between-subjects experimental design.
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Chapter 16. Limitations
Zusammenfassung
In line with previous research, this paper also exhibits limitations and hence provides opportunities for further studies. First, our outcomes need to be interpreted in light of the limitations of the study design.
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Chapter 17. Implications for Further Research
Abstract
Based on the findings mentioned in the previous chapter, this paper presents practical implications that should inform the choices of public policy makers, brand managers and SMIs. Our research is motivated on the one hand by the relevance of SMI-advertising, focusing in particular on the question how additional “honest opinion” messages should be used within commercial content. On the other hand, we aim to observe if SMIs that regularly post product endorsements, blunt their image and become commercial when compared to SMIs that do not endorse multiple products.
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Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
The Effects of Impartiality Disclosure on Brand Objectives for No and Multiple Product Endorsements
verfasst von
Corina Oprea
Copyright-Jahr
2023
Electronic ISBN
978-3-658-41364-4
Print ISBN
978-3-658-41363-7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-41364-4