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Consumer responses to promoted tweets sent by brands and political parties
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Central Michigan University, United States;2. Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, United States;3. Ohio State University, Museum of Biological Diversity, Room 1308, 1315 Kinnear Road, Columbus, OH 43212, United States
Abstract:This study aims to understand how consumers respond to social media advertising (SMA) by focusing on promoted tweets sent by brands and political parties, and examines persuasion knowledge as underlying mechanism of these responses. Two online experiments with between-subjects designs, comparing the effects of SMA (promoted vs. non-promoted tweet) and the source of the tweet (political party vs. brand), were conducted. Study 1 showed that consumers rarely notice it when a tweet is promoted. Study 2 demonstrated that when a promoted tweet was sent by a political party, the recipient's recognition that the tweet was a form of advertisement (i.e., activated persuasion knowledge) reduced online behavioral intention, increased skepticism, and negatively affected source trustworthiness and attitudes. This effect was not present for brands. Although research has shown that social media can be an important platform to engage audiences, this study is the first to study the mechanisms underlying the effects of SMA, and whether there are any boundary conditions to these effects. These findings suggest that political parties should be cautious in their use of social media advertising as it can evoke negative responses.
Keywords:Social network advertising  Twitter  Persuasion knowledge  Source trustworthiness  Online behavior  Brands
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