Examining the Impact of eWOM-triggered Customer-to-Customer Interactions on Travelers’ Repurchase and Social Media Engagement
Examining the Impact of eWOM-triggered Customer-to-Customer Interactions on Travelers’ Repurchase and Social Media Engagement
Electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM) communication on social media has revolutionized how travelers search for and share information and how they interact with one another digitally. This research examines the effects of eWOM-triggered customer-to-customer (C2C) interactions on travelers’ post-eWOM behaviors (i.e., repurchase and customer engagement) in a cross-cultural context. Drawing upon cognitive dissonance theory, a scenario-based experiment was conducted using a sample of 461 African tourists with recent intracontinental travel experience. Our findings suggest that a customer’s repurchase intention and engagement in social media C2C interactions are significantly influenced when their eWOM is challenged by other customers. Compared with individualistic cultures, such a phenomenon is more effective in collectivistic cultures, particularly when a customer shares negative eWOM. Customers in collectivistic cultures are more likely to appreciate consensus with other customers, and they tend to expend more effort toward solving dissonance. The theoretical and managerial implications of these findings are discussed.
word-of-mouth (WOM), social media, customer engagement, repurchase intention, cognitive dissonance
Izogo, Ernest
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Mpinganjira, Mercy
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Karjaluoto, Heikki
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Liu, Hongfei
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Izogo, Ernest
d1e9ba55-5392-4799-8f04-feb4644cdfd6
Mpinganjira, Mercy
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Karjaluoto, Heikki
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Liu, Hongfei
7d65edcf-20c9-452a-83c2-8b545b12f68c
Izogo, Ernest, Mpinganjira, Mercy, Karjaluoto, Heikki and Liu, Hongfei
(2021)
Examining the Impact of eWOM-triggered Customer-to-Customer Interactions on Travelers’ Repurchase and Social Media Engagement.
Journal of Travel Research.
(In Press)
Abstract
Electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM) communication on social media has revolutionized how travelers search for and share information and how they interact with one another digitally. This research examines the effects of eWOM-triggered customer-to-customer (C2C) interactions on travelers’ post-eWOM behaviors (i.e., repurchase and customer engagement) in a cross-cultural context. Drawing upon cognitive dissonance theory, a scenario-based experiment was conducted using a sample of 461 African tourists with recent intracontinental travel experience. Our findings suggest that a customer’s repurchase intention and engagement in social media C2C interactions are significantly influenced when their eWOM is challenged by other customers. Compared with individualistic cultures, such a phenomenon is more effective in collectivistic cultures, particularly when a customer shares negative eWOM. Customers in collectivistic cultures are more likely to appreciate consensus with other customers, and they tend to expend more effort toward solving dissonance. The theoretical and managerial implications of these findings are discussed.
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Main Document_R3
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 September 2021
Keywords:
word-of-mouth (WOM), social media, customer engagement, repurchase intention, cognitive dissonance
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 451615
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451615
ISSN: 0047-2875
PURE UUID: 227a1f68-4294-4b6e-af9d-ba84a061d6a6
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Date deposited: 14 Oct 2021 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:01
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Contributors
Author:
Ernest Izogo
Author:
Mercy Mpinganjira
Author:
Heikki Karjaluoto
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