4.4 Article

The Effects of Animistic Thinking, Animistic Cues, and Superstitions on Brand Responses on Social Media

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERACTIVE MARKETING
Volume 55, Issue -, Pages 104-117

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.intmar.2021.03.002

Keywords

Animistic thinking; Animism; Animistic cues; Social media; Superstitions

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Funding

  1. National Science Centre in Poland [2016/21/B/HS4/00658]

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The study reveals that on social media, animistic (vs. non-animistic) cues can trigger animistic thinking, leading to more favorable brand evaluations, with this effect being moderated by superstitious beliefs.
Although marketers have been using various message tactics to breathe life into their brands, the concepts of animism and animistic cues, particularly in social media marketing, have received little theoretical and empirical attention. Therefore, we conducted two studies to uncover what drives animistic thinking on social media, how animism is linked to anthropomorphism, how animism can benefit brands online, and what the boundary conditions for this phenomenon are. The findings demonstrate that animistic (vs. non-animistic) cues elicit animistic thinking, which leads to more favorable brand evaluations. This effect is moderated by superstitious beliefs. The results provide new knowledge for both marketing researchers and practitioners, revealing that it is easier to activate animism than anthropomorphism on social media and that such activation can be done via easily devisable cues (such as simple movement), particularly when addressing highly superstitious consumers. (C) 2021 Direct Marketing Educational Foundation, Inc. dba Marketing EDGE.

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