Abstract

PurposeThis paper examines whether guests contribute sWOM (social word of mouth) on different SNSs (social networking sites) regarding various personal motivations. SNSs have changed the way guests eat and experience their food and dishes. Marketing managers have effectively targeted SNSs as a marketing tool, yet have little research about drivers of guests' sWOM contribution on SNSs has been done. A model including the significant motives: (1) experiences, (2) opinion leadership, (3) reflection of self and (4) need for unique is tested to investigate their positive effects on contribution behavior of social media guests.Design/methodology/approachThe data collected from 411 guests by using the snowball method was used for analysis. The structural equation modeling was applied to examine the relationships among the constructs and test the eight proposed hypotheses.FindingsResults reveal that experiences, opinion leadership, reflection of self and need for unique were positively associated with contributing sWOM of restaurants. Furthermore, those who have positive experiences tend to be opinion leadership and reflection of self. And guests who show reflection of self, they are more likely to have opinion leaders and show need for uniqueness. Our study expands the existing frameworks of sWOM contribution by identifying various motivations and labeling sWOM. Findings provide restaurant managers with managerial implications for online marketing strategies on SNSs to attract sWOM contribution among guests.Research limitations/implicationsIt has some limitations while discovering the motivations of positive sWOM contribution. First, we only focused on the motivation of contributing positive sWOM, while negative sWOM received many arguments in changing attitudes toward buying products or services. Second, we collected data in Vietnam only without comparing with different countries. Future research could explore further cross-cultural perspectives to fill the gap. Third, this study explored sWOM contribution in service environment, sWOM contribution from service context may be slightly different from those of product brands.Practical implicationsThese findings highlight the motivations of sWOM contribution that restaurant managers must recognize and make use of it. SNSs have given power to consumers to post everything at anytime and anywhere they like, therefore restaurant managers need to deeply understand why their consumers contribute sWOM. In digital era, customers and guests have become the ultimate tools for promoting product or service brands. The marketing managers should create an online platform in order to facilitate their consumers to discuss their brand frequently (Charu et al., 2018). Restaurants should have policies to push positive eWOM maximally and also reduce advertising costs.Originality/valueThis is one of the first studies on sWOM contribution of what motivate guests to contribute their sWOM on SNSs. Theoretically, this study offers deep insights into the links between various motivations and sWOM in foodservice context. Managerially, understanding these motivations allow marketing managers create effective policies that motivate guests to contribute positive word of mouth.

Highlights

  • According to Hootsuite’s report in Jan 2020, there are more than 4.54 billion of Internet users and 3.8 billion active social online users worldwide

  • The discriminant and convergent validity among constructs was assessed by examining the alpha values of all five constructs ranged from 0.824 to 0.908 that exceeding the minimum requirement for reliability of 0.70 (Hair et al, 2010); standardized factor loadings for all items ranged from 0.683 to 0.898; the average variance extracted (AVE) of all constructs ranged from 0.544 to 0.712, exceeding the recommended 0.5 that mean the variance was explained by these constructs (Hair et al, 2010)

  • The hypothesized relationship between opinion leadership and Social word of mouth (sWOM) contribution (H2) was supported by a significant estimate (β 5 0. 144, p 5 0.015). These findings indicated that guests have a perception of opinion leadership, are very likely to communicate with others in both offline and online environments

Read more

Summary

Introduction

According to Hootsuite’s report in Jan 2020, there are more than 4.54 billion of Internet users and 3.8 billion active social online users worldwide. The social network most used in many countries is Facebook, accounting for nearly 2.5 billion of users; followed by YouTube with about 2 billion. The average Vietnamese users are aged 18 to 45 (accounting for over 60% of total population), they usually visit different social networking sites (SNSs) within 150 minutes daily. The behavior of Vietnamese social network users is reported mainly to engage news or contribute their daily activities on social networks. The rapid growth of social online platforms has facilitated the increasing study of social media topics all over the world (Chu and Kim, 2011). In Vietnam, this topic seems to be new and fragmented, has not received much attention from researchers, educators or practitioners as well

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call