A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages

© 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop and empirically test a process model (comprising of seven dimensions), for identifying online customer engagement patterns leading to recommendation. These seven dimensions are communication, interaction, experience,...

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Main Authors: Potdar, Vidyasagar, Joshi, S., Harish, R., Baskerville, Richard, Wongthongtham, Pornpit
Format: Journal Article
Published: Emerald Publishing Limited 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69009
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author Potdar, Vidyasagar
Joshi, S.
Harish, R.
Baskerville, Richard
Wongthongtham, Pornpit
author_facet Potdar, Vidyasagar
Joshi, S.
Harish, R.
Baskerville, Richard
Wongthongtham, Pornpit
author_sort Potdar, Vidyasagar
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop and empirically test a process model (comprising of seven dimensions), for identifying online customer engagement patterns leading to recommendation. These seven dimensions are communication, interaction, experience, satisfaction, continued involvement, bonding, and recommendation. Design/methodology/approach: The authors used a non-participant form of netnography for analyzing 849 comments from Australian banks Facebook pages. High levels of inter-coder reliability strengthen the study’s empirical validity and ensure minimum researcher bias and maximum reliability and replicability. Findings: The authors identified 22 unique pattern of customer engagement, out of which nine patterns resulted in recommendation/advocacy. Engagement pattern communication-interaction-recommendation was the fastest route to recommendation, observed in nine instances (or 2 percent). In comparison, C-I-E-S-CI-B-R was the longest route to recommendation observed in ninety-six instances (or 18 percent). Of the eight patterns that resulted in recommendation, five patterns (or 62.5 percent) showed bonding happening before recommendation. Research limitations/implications: The authors limited the data collection to Facebook pages of major banks in Australia. The authors did not assess customer demography and did not share the findings with the banks. Practical implications: The findings will guide e-marketers on how to best engage with customers to enhance brand loyalty and continuously be in touch with their clients. Originality/value: Most models are conceptual and assume that customers typically journey through all the stages in the model. The work is interesting because the empirical study found that customers travel in multiple different ways through this process. It is significant because it changes the way the authors understand patterns of online customer engagement.
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format Journal Article
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:39:43Z
publishDate 2018
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-690092018-10-02T07:41:10Z A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages Potdar, Vidyasagar Joshi, S. Harish, R. Baskerville, Richard Wongthongtham, Pornpit © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop and empirically test a process model (comprising of seven dimensions), for identifying online customer engagement patterns leading to recommendation. These seven dimensions are communication, interaction, experience, satisfaction, continued involvement, bonding, and recommendation. Design/methodology/approach: The authors used a non-participant form of netnography for analyzing 849 comments from Australian banks Facebook pages. High levels of inter-coder reliability strengthen the study’s empirical validity and ensure minimum researcher bias and maximum reliability and replicability. Findings: The authors identified 22 unique pattern of customer engagement, out of which nine patterns resulted in recommendation/advocacy. Engagement pattern communication-interaction-recommendation was the fastest route to recommendation, observed in nine instances (or 2 percent). In comparison, C-I-E-S-CI-B-R was the longest route to recommendation observed in ninety-six instances (or 18 percent). Of the eight patterns that resulted in recommendation, five patterns (or 62.5 percent) showed bonding happening before recommendation. Research limitations/implications: The authors limited the data collection to Facebook pages of major banks in Australia. The authors did not assess customer demography and did not share the findings with the banks. Practical implications: The findings will guide e-marketers on how to best engage with customers to enhance brand loyalty and continuously be in touch with their clients. Originality/value: Most models are conceptual and assume that customers typically journey through all the stages in the model. The work is interesting because the empirical study found that customers travel in multiple different ways through this process. It is significant because it changes the way the authors understand patterns of online customer engagement. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69009 10.1108/ITP-02-2017-0035 Emerald Publishing Limited restricted
spellingShingle Potdar, Vidyasagar
Joshi, S.
Harish, R.
Baskerville, Richard
Wongthongtham, Pornpit
A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages
title A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages
title_full A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages
title_fullStr A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages
title_full_unstemmed A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages
title_short A process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on Facebook brand pages
title_sort process model for identifying online customer engagement patterns on facebook brand pages
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69009