4.7 Article

How being envied shapes tourists' relationships with luxury brands: A dual-mediation model

Journal

TOURISM MANAGEMENT
Volume 86, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tourman.2021.104344

Keywords

Luxury brand; Social media; Benignly envied; Maliciously envied; Pride; Anxiety; Self-brand connection

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71902120]
  2. Research Initiation Foundation of Hainan University [kyqd(sk)1931]
  3. Faculty Development Scheme of the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [UGC/FDS14/B12/19, UGC/FDS14/B06/20]

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Positive reviews of luxury brands on social media may trigger envy, affecting review writers' self-brand connection. The strength of social ties also plays a moderating role in the impact of envy on writers. These insights provide valuable managerial implications for luxury brand managers in buzz marketing strategies.
Positive reviews of luxury brands on social media provide tourists with an opportunity for self-presentation. Recent studies have suggested that these reviews can easily trigger envy in receivers, yet few studies have discussed the effect of envy on review writers. This research examined the effects of review writers' perceptions of being envied on their relationships with the luxury brands they shared on social media. The results of three experiments in vacation scenarios showed that writers were more likely to feel pride (anxiety) when they were benignly (maliciously) envied, eliciting a stronger (weaker) self-brand connection. Moreover, social tie strength played a moderating role. The effect of being envied was stronger when writers and receivers had strong (vs. weak) ties. Our findings provide luxury brand managers with managerial insights into content customization and platform selection in buzz marketing strategies.

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