Does LinkedIn cause imposter syndrome? An empirical examination of well-being and consumption-related effects
Does LinkedIn cause imposter syndrome? An empirical examination of well-being and consumption-related effects
We attend to the unexamined intersection between professional social network site (SNS) usage and imposter syndrome. Specifically, we provide the first examination of: do such sites cause imposter thoughts (“others think I am more competent than I think I am”); if so, why and when this happens, and what effect this has on well-being and consumption-related results. Supported by objective self-focused attention theory and two online experiments, we show that professional SNS usage heightens professional self-focused attention, triggering imposter thoughts. This results in negative emotions and consumption-related effects. We further examine two boundary conditions, showing that effects are reduced for individuals high in narcissism or work centrality. From these findings, we extend the sociocognitive theorization of the imposter phenomenon by uncovering, first, context-specific self-focused attention as the reason “why” people feel imposter-ish in particular circumstances and second, consumption-related consequences. We further contribute imposter thoughts as a new alternative explanation for negative emotions experienced whilst using professional SNSs.
LinkedIn, compensatory consumption, imposter phenomenon, imposter syndrome, objective self-focused attention, social network sites, well-being
Marder, Ben
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Javornik, Ana
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Qi, Kang
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Oliver, Sebastian
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Lavertu, Laura
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Cowan, Kirsten
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Marder, Ben
6c556d4a-af17-4625-b03b-fe84159fdf2d
Javornik, Ana
2b92152c-ea86-4c4b-add7-5bff2e8941d3
Qi, Kang
8f30597a-aafd-4cd8-a541-33cc74f4737d
Oliver, Sebastian
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Lavertu, Laura
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Cowan, Kirsten
1f9287cc-261a-408f-9321-677a8caa3758
Marder, Ben, Javornik, Ana, Qi, Kang, Oliver, Sebastian, Lavertu, Laura and Cowan, Kirsten
(2023)
Does LinkedIn cause imposter syndrome? An empirical examination of well-being and consumption-related effects.
Psychology and Marketing.
(doi:10.1002/mar.21926).
Abstract
We attend to the unexamined intersection between professional social network site (SNS) usage and imposter syndrome. Specifically, we provide the first examination of: do such sites cause imposter thoughts (“others think I am more competent than I think I am”); if so, why and when this happens, and what effect this has on well-being and consumption-related results. Supported by objective self-focused attention theory and two online experiments, we show that professional SNS usage heightens professional self-focused attention, triggering imposter thoughts. This results in negative emotions and consumption-related effects. We further examine two boundary conditions, showing that effects are reduced for individuals high in narcissism or work centrality. From these findings, we extend the sociocognitive theorization of the imposter phenomenon by uncovering, first, context-specific self-focused attention as the reason “why” people feel imposter-ish in particular circumstances and second, consumption-related consequences. We further contribute imposter thoughts as a new alternative explanation for negative emotions experienced whilst using professional SNSs.
Text
Psychology and Marketing - 2023 - Marder - Does LinkedIn cause imposter syndrome An empirical examination of well‐being
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 October 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 October 2023
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Psychology & Marketing published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Keywords:
LinkedIn, compensatory consumption, imposter phenomenon, imposter syndrome, objective self-focused attention, social network sites, well-being
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 483228
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483228
ISSN: 0742-6046
PURE UUID: 0c60c95f-00d8-4946-91f1-32b2fe6ba2ff
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Date deposited: 26 Oct 2023 16:48
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:13
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Contributors
Author:
Ben Marder
Author:
Ana Javornik
Author:
Kang Qi
Author:
Sebastian Oliver
Author:
Laura Lavertu
Author:
Kirsten Cowan
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