Abstract
In the last decade, Social Media platforms such as Twitter have gained importance in the various marketing strategies of companies. This work aims to examine the presence of influential content on a textual level, by investigating characteristics of tweets in the context of social impact theory, and its dimension immediacy. To this end, we analysed influential Twitter communication data during Black Friday 2018 with methods from social media analytics such as sentiment analysis and degree centrality. Results show significant differences in communication style between companies and influencers. Companies published longer textual content and created more tweets with a positive sentiment and more first-person pronouns than influencers. These findings shall serve as a basis for a future experimental study to examine the impact of text presence on consumer cognition and the willingness to purchase.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | ACIS 2020 Proceedings |
| Publisher | Association for Information Systems |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Publication status | Published - 4 Dec 2020 |
| Event | 31st Australasian Conference on Information Systems - Virtual Conference, New Zealand Duration: 1 Dec 2020 → 4 Dec 2020 https://kmeducationhub.de/australasian-conference-on-information-systems-acis/ |
Conference
| Conference | 31st Australasian Conference on Information Systems |
|---|---|
| Abbreviated title | ACIS 2020 |
| Country/Territory | New Zealand |
| City | Virtual Conference |
| Period | 1/12/20 → 4/12/20 |
| Internet address |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- Online Influence
- Social Impact Theory
- Social Media
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