Abstract

This study focuses on social media brand engagement in the context of shared and collaborative consumption businesses, a novel trend in the hospitality industry. By drawing on the concept of brands being defined collectively through an assemblage of heterogonous human and nonhuman actors, and focusing on the brand Airbnb—a peer-to-peer online platform for renting, swapping, and lending accommodations—the current study examines how consumers’ perceptions of Airbnb brand equity mediate the relationship between functional and hedonic brand image and social media behavioral engagement in terms of consumption, contribution, and creation of brand-related content (COBRAs). Results discriminate between direct and indirect effects. Findings reveal that hedonic brand image directly influences behavioral engagement on social media, whereas brand equity fully mediates the relationship between functional brand image and COBRAs. Implications for theory and practice related to shared or collaborative consumption platforms in the hospitality industry are discussed and suggestions for future studies are presented. This research paper provides conceptual and theoretical clarity on issues such as how consumers’ brand perceptions influence their behavioral engagement on social media.

Highlights

  • The rise of social media and mobile apps, as well as the increased reliance on e-commerce systems, has facilitated the sharing of goods and services (Lu and Kandampully 2016), privileging access over ownership (Hamari et al 2016)

  • The behavioral interpretation of consumer brand engagement (CBE) is used as a basis for the analysis presented further in this paper, with the pattern and type of brand-related activities that users get Social media brand engagement in the context of collaborative consumption: the case of AIRBNB

  • In terms of the levels of education, 51.44% (n = 321) the respondents had completed at least some college education, 26.94% (n = 121) had received a high school diploma, and the remainder declared to have obtained a secondary school certificate

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Summary

Introduction

The rise of social media and mobile apps, as well as the increased reliance on e-commerce systems, has facilitated the sharing of goods and services (Lu and Kandampully 2016), privileging access over ownership (Hamari et al 2016). From the traditional accommodation sector, peer-to-peer accommodation brands rely heavily on the engagement of users on social media in their marketing and branding strategies (Moon et al 2019). This study explores, in the context of shared and collaborative consumption businesses, how core impressions and perceptions of brands influence consumers’ behavior regarding brand engagement on social media

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