E-Cigarette Marketing on Social Networking Sites
E-Cigarette Marketing on Social Networking Sites
Abstract: Applying elaboration likelihood model (ELM) and extant literature on consumer-brand engagement (CBE), this study examined exposure to three types of electronic cigarette (e-cig) marketing messages (sponsored ads, brand pages, user-created groups) on social networking sites (SNSs), and their joint influence on brand- and health-related outcomes. Results (N=1016) indicated that e-cig users who joined user-created e-cig brand groups had significantly more negative attitudes towards quitting, lower perceived behavioral control, intention to quit and self-efficacy than those exposed to sponsored ads or following brand pages, while also having significantly greater brand involvement, self-brand connection, brand usage intent and eWoM intention. Exposure to two or more types of e-cig marketing messages had an additive effect on health- and brand-related outcomes. Social identification, attention to social comparison and subjective norms also moderated between exposure to e-cig marketing messages and key dependent measures. Implications for marketers and regulators are discussed.
Related Research
-
Effects of visuals in solutions journalism: A social media eye-tracking experimentBart Wojdynski, Kyser Lough, & Sohyun Park (current Ph.D. Student) (2023, August). “Effects of visuals in solutions journalism: A social media eye-tracking experiment.” Paper accepted for presentation at the 106th Annual Association for Education […]
-
Pushing Hands and Buttons: The Effects of Corporate Social Issue Stance Communication and Online Comment (In)Civility on Publics’ Emotional and Behavioral ResponsesWenqing Zhao (PhD student), Xuerong Lu (PhD alum), Yan Jin, and Toni van der Meer. “Pushing Hands and Buttons: The Effects of Corporate Social Issue Stance Communication and Online Comment (In)Civility on Publics’ Emotional […]