KOREASCHOLAR

HOW TO INCREASE THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CELEBRITY-BASED COMMUNICATION FOR LUXURY BRANDS ON SOCIAL MEDIA?

Yi Xie, Ke Chen, Zhuzhu Xu, Luping Zhu
  • LanguageENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/350614
Global Marketing Conference
2018 Global Marketing Conference at Tokyo (2018.07)
pp.17-18
글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 (Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations)
Abstract

With the tremendous development of social media in recent years, luxury brands have welcomed social media with open arms as a means to engage with their customers. How luxury brands can make good use of social media marketing strategy is a top priority for both academicians and partitions but has not been well investigated. Many significant research gaps are present in this area warranting further explorations. For example, there is little research on the effectiveness of celebrity endorsement on social media (except for Chung and Cho’ (2017) study), even less for luxury brands. In addition, previous research on social media marketing mainly focuses on western-based platforms such as Facebook and Twitter.

Given the mentioned research gaps, this study builds on social media marketing and celebrity endorsement literature and aims to investigate the key factors influencing the effectiveness of celebrity-based social media marketing efforts for luxury brands. In particular, China market and Sina Weibo are selected as our research setting. We propose the message characteristics, celebrity characteristics, celebrity-brand relationship and brand characteristics have impact on customer engagement in celebrity-based social media marketing activities. We combined two data sources to generate the key variables. First, we derived posts on the brand pages of 12 luxury brands (e.g., Cartier, Tiffany, BVLGARI and PIAGET) that were published on Sina Weibo from September 2016 to March 2017 on the middle of December 2017. Then celebrity-related posts were all picked out. The final sample includes more than five hundred celebrity-related brand posts. For each post, it contains three kinds of engagement measures (i.e., the number of Likes, Retweets and Comments) observed on Sina Weibo. They are dependent variables in our model. We built up regression models to test the hypotheses. To generate those variables that cannot be derived directly from the posts, a set of independent coders was recruited to quantify those variables. The exploratory results show that posts related to celebrities (e.g., brand ambassador/spokesman) take a significant part of posts on Sina Weibo brand pages.

Author
  • Yi Xie(University of International Business & Economics, China)
  • Ke Chen(University of International Business & Economics, China)
  • Zhuzhu Xu(University of International Business & Economics, China)
  • Luping Zhu(University of International Business & Economics, China)