Digital Marketing Strategies for Value Co-creation: Models and Approaches for Online Brand Communities

Digital Marketing Strategies for Value Co-creation: Models and Approaches for Online Brand Communities

Digital Marketing Strategies for Value Co-creation: Models and Approaches for Online Brand Communities

Digital Marketing Strategies for Value Co-creation: Models and Approaches for Online Brand Communities

Paperback(1st ed. 2022)

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Overview

Online brand communities (OBCs) are hugely important in the development of marketing strategy, but it is unclear how marketers can effectively utilise these platforms to enhance and develop consumer engagement. For an online brand community to be successful, it should allow members to feel a connection to the brand and with other members while forming a disconnection from those not belonging to the community. It should also have rituals and traditions that join members together over a revered commonality, and moral responsibility in contributing to the community. Indeed, brands play active roles in securing degrees of activity in OBCs’ through content that offers members the quality of engagement they seek.

This book focuses on contemporary digital marketing issues in OBCs, offering a comprehensive examination of consumers’ response to active engagement in such communities. It discusses how brands can tap into the various levels of participation, engagement and online conversations in the development of marketing strategy and ultimately examines how an online brand community strengthens value co-creation.

Balancing theory with practical approaches, this book gives serious treatment to an important yet until now overlooked area of digital marketing strategy, providing an important resource for scholars, students and practitioners.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783030944469
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Publication date: 03/24/2022
Edition description: 1st ed. 2022
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x (d)

About the Author

Wilson Ozuem is a Professor of Digital Economy at the University of Cumbria, UK. His general area of expertise lies in digital marketing and fashion marketing, while his specific research interest concerns the impacts of emerging computer-mediated marketing environments on the fashion industry. Prof. Ozuem is acknowledged as one of the international leaders in the study of digital marketing and multichannel retailing. His research has been published in key journals, including the European Journal of Marketing, Journal of Business Research, Information Technology & People and Psychology & Marketing, and many others.

Michelle Willis is a Lecturer in Digital and e-Business at the University of Cumbria, UK. Her research interest lies in emerging technologies, particularly the interface between social networking sites and the development of marketing programmes, and online service failure and recovery strategies, in association with consumers of the millennial generation. She has co-authored chapters in textbooks, articles for the journal Psychology & Marketing, and conference papers in her specialist area of research that were presented at the American Marketing Association and the European Marketing Academy conferences.

Table of Contents

1) Online brand communities: introduction and context

This chapter sets the scene by setting out a number of reasons why an online brand community (OBC) is an integral part of digital marketing strategy. This chapter explains and discusses the relevance of OBCs and how a detailed knowledge of them could enhance the creation of an effective digital marketing strategy. The evolution from material consumption to information consumption, knowledge sharing and interactive communication processes, combined with the rise of the internet, has led to the emerging concept of OBCs. Despite their categorisation as a digital media platform or a form of social media, OBCs have distinctive features that differentiate them from other digital platforms, such as social networking sites, blogs and forums, which are widely accessible to general audiences compared to the exclusivity that OBCs emphasise. This chapter introduces the concepts and features of OBCs, beginning with their development in the digital revolution and their integration into social media activity.

2) Participation and customer involvement

This chapter explores consumers’ participation in OBCs, focusing on the various levels of participation, including antecedents, mediators and moderators. Customers’ decision to participate and commit to being involved in OBCs is often influenced by pre-existing bias or experience embedded in their thinking processes, which cause them to perceive an OBC’s characteristics and the activity conducted in an OBC from a positive, negative or neutral perspective. This in turn can impact how they will participate in OBCs and whether their participation will present advantages or disadvantages to a brand. Individual customers will have different motivations for participating in OBCs and will deliver different results; thus, OBCs have diverse perspectives and online activity behaviours. In this chapter, we look at the common OBC characteristics that influence customers responses towards OBC content and activities and other participating OBC members, and how the customers’ thinking process is effected by the characteristics.

3) OBCs and customer loyalty

This chapter begins with an important two-part examination of online brand communication and customer loyalty. In this chapter, the focus is on how an OBC is an effective means of influencing customer behaviour. The chapter discusses the link between OBCs and customer loyalty. We explore the rise of OBCs, and explain how loyalty has become more complicated and the emergence of OBC-based types of loyalty. OBCs can contain details about customers’ purchasing actions and attitudes towards brands; however, social media managers are having to read between the lines to check whether OBC users’ online activity translates into active or passive customer loyalty and whether those users intend to continue to be loyal to the brand in the long term. This chapter provides a framework that provides insight into the different types of loyalty of OBC customers and explores how their OBC activity interconnects with their type of loyalty.

4) Consumer engagement and satisfaction

This chapter focuses on consumer engagement and satisfaction. The chapter discusses a range of consumer engagements which might lead to customer satisfaction. We examine how consumer engagement has major economic and social benefits and can be a key predictor of future business performance. The chapter identifies the importance of understanding engagement and the shifts in consumer–brand interactions, and further discusses that engagement (the consumer or the brand) remains on-going. Engagement is co-created and initiated by either the marketer or consumer. Consumer engagement is multidimensional and an umbrella term for a range of dimensions including cognitive, emotional, behavioural and social, all of which represent different antecedents and consequences of developing long lasting customer relationships. This chapter seeks to examine these different dimensions and how they impact customer satisfaction.

5) Social identification and commitment

This chapter examines social identification and its importance in understanding OBC users. Social identification is a strengthening attribute of OBC users leading to long-term commitment. Social identification is the foundation for community creation including OBCs. Not only does social identification make individuals feel welcomed or give them a sense of belonging, it can also exert influence on brand-related purchase decisions and the number and duration of community visits. These factors oblige companies to ensure their OBC activity aligns with the values and identities of targeted customer segments, or to adapt if they seek to target a larger audience, creating a plurality of OBCs that target niche or mass customer segments. Considering the diverse identities of customers, some customers will be attracted based on the appeal of the brand, or the community members, or both. This chapter examines the heterogenic nature of OBCs concerning social identification and commitment and how companies utilise OBCs to appeal to their target audience.

6) Brand and customer loyalty

OBCs can facilitate the development of brand loyalty and the brand’s long-term relationships with customers. However, the internet enables individuals to access OBCs without having purchased from the brand, and they can come and go as they wish. The challenge for companies is to build or maintain these individuals’ loyalty to the brand itself through OBCs; thus, developing them from a passive follower and socialiser to an active customer. Managing these individuals is complex as they have varying levels of engagement and loyalty towards brands, and have different needs, values and expectations. This chapter provides a multidimensional examination of managing brand loyalty in the context of OBCs.

7) Brand relationships and engagement

This chapter advances the conceptualisation of the practical implications of customer engagement in the context of OBCs. Detailed examination of the concepts and features of OBCs must be integrated with the concepts of customer engagement to understand two important entities, “brand” and the “community”, and their importance in building customer engagement. Engagement related to the brand can differ from community-related engagement; this prompts the need to alter online activities to meet the differing needs of the customers, which complicates the management of customer engagement in OBCs. This chapter provides in-depth knowledge of value-driven insights into OBCs that can enhance customer engagement.

8) Managing service failure and recovery strategies

The chapter focuses on the strategic importance of OBC s in the service failure process. The open access of the internet facilitates increased customer awareness of service failures, and OBCs can alert other customers to service failures. This has encouraged companies to embrace the opportunity to adapt their service recovery strategies to include online response and presence. Additionally, companies are expected to develop OBC-orientated recovery strategies to address failures when they are brought up by customers in OBCs and to manage the firestorms that could arise following a reported failure. OBCs enable customers to become involved in the recovery strategy for the service failure they and other customers encountered, thus extending the role of recovery efforts to both the firm and the customers depending on the situation and capabilities.

9) Value co-creation sphere

This chapter examines how an OBC strengthens value co-creation. The chapter examines three main theoretical orientations: social influence theory, actor–network theory and self-categorisation theory. The chapter focuses on customers’ different levels of involvement in OBCs, and further discusses how customers’ interactive stances could be understood using various key theoretical lenses. How do these ideas influence understanding of a consumer’s level of engagement in an OBC? How would a brand leverage these ideas in the creation and development of a digital marketing strategy?

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

The book Digital Marketing Strategies for Value Co-creation: Models and Approaches for Online Brand Communities is a must-read for any academic in the field of digital marketing and brand management. The book offers insights into the current state of research combined with the latest trends in digital marketing.
Professor (Dr) Elena Patten, Fashion Management, Macromedia University of Applied Sciences, Germany

The authors describe concepts and theories across multiple components of digital marketing, and provide practical recommendations for the successful usage of digital strategies. Their holistic approach offers guidelines for advancement in the digital marketing field. The content is thoughtfully and critically presented, and it opens avenues for groundbreaking online marketing strategies for researchers and practitioners.

Dr Yllka Azemi, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Indiana University Northwest, USA

This text provides an excellent discussion and understanding of digital marketing strategy and signposts the evolution OBCs. A must read for academics interested in comprehending how new technologies facilitate the integration of social identities and development of online communities.

Professor Kerry E. Howell, Deputy Faculty Pro Vice Chancellor (Business & Law) Northumbria University, UK

The authors of this book investigate and summarise value co-creation from several different theoretical perspectives, which can help brands achieve better value co-creation in their interactions with customers. The book also puts forward specific strategies and methods for influencer marketing and service failure and remediation in online brand communities. The book systematically introduces marketing models and approaches for online brand communities, and its findings have theoretical significance and can act as guidelines, which can be a great help for marketers and researchers.

Professor Xiaoting Zheng, Dean of the School of Electronic Commerce, Jiujiang University, China

Consumers are no longer mere receivers of company messages, but can act as real co-creators of brand meanings that managers cannot ignore. This book offers some novel insights into understanding how marketers and practitioners can tap into the richness of online brand communities. A very useful resource for both postgraduate and undergraduate students.

 Dr Silvia Ranfagni, Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Florence, Italy


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