Abstract
Community gifting, the phenomenon of donating digital goods to peers without selecting specific recipients, is one of live streaming's key social technologies for engaging online communities. In this study, we investigate the causal relationship between receiving a community gift and the recipient's subsequent social and monetary engagement behaviors by exploiting the randomization of recipient assignment on the popular live streaming platform, Twitch. We find that, relative to nonrecipients within a five-minute window of a community gifting event, community gift recipients exhibit a 69% chance of directing an additional message toward their peers, a 35% chance of directing an additional message toward the streamer and a 5% chance of gifting an incremental subscription to the community. However, recipients are no more likely to tip the streamer. We apply computational linguistics methods to illustrate that recipients' increased social engagement is accompanied by elevated sentiment and an increased likelihood of joining existing conversations. Finally, we conduct a series of moderator analyses, and find that recipients' gifting behavior is less frequent when there are more gifting events prior to the focal community gift, i.e., allowing the recipient to hide. Moreover, the social engagement effect of receiving a community gift is greater when prior chatter is more voluminous and discontinuous, i.e., when it is easier for the recipient to jump into the chat. We conclude that the spillovers to social engagement are more important than those to financial reciprocity given the positive feedback loop implied by our moderator analysis. Our results reveal how and when community gifting impacts audience engagement.
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