Abstract

Social technologies allow brands to build digital platforms that stimulate consumer engagement by enabling customers to connect with one another, to freely discuss a brand, to conduct product and price comparisons, to personalise product features and ultimately to make purchases (Pagani and Mirabello 2012). Moreover, online network-based communities (Dholakia et al. 2004) – such as social networks and micro-blogs – not only enable users to express their identity and satisfy social needs through the sharing of brand-related experiences (Christodoulides 2009, p. 143) but also allow them to satisfy self-definitional needs by developing their social identity (Tajfel 1978). Within such interactive, personalised and participatory communication environments, increasing attention is being given by marketing scholars and practitioners to different types of online experiential engagement (Calder and Malthouse 2004; Calder et al. 2009) and to self-definitional issues (Sicilia et al. 2013). However, there is a lack of theoretical and empirical research efforts to develop an integrative perspective between experiential engagement and social identity theory (Brodie et al. 2013). In addition, empirical research on online network-based communities, specifically Facebook brand fan pages, and its role in the consumer-brand affective relationship building process is in its early stages (Gummerus et al. 2012). In particular, an emerging issue in this field is related to the consequences of these virtual networks in terms of brand love. Brand love is the more recent construct in the branding literature and is defined as “the degree of passionate emotional attachment a satisfied consumer has for a particular trade name” (Carroll and Ahuvia 2006, p. 81).

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