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The invisible leash : when human brands hijack corporate brands' consumer relationships

Giertz, Johann N. ; Hollebeek, Linda D. LU ; Weiger, Welf H. and Hammerschmidt, Maik (2022) In Journal of Service Management 33(3). p.485-495
Abstract

Purpose: Corporate brands increasingly use influential, high reach human brands (e.g. influencers, celebrities), who have strong parasocial relationships with their followers and audiences, to promote their offerings. However, despite emerging understanding of the benefits arising from human brand-based campaigns, knowledge about their potentially negative effects on the corporate brand remains limited. Addressing this gap, this paper deepens insight into the potential risk human brands pose to corporate brands. Design/methodology/approach: To explore these issues, this conceptual paper reviews and integrates literature on consumer brand engagement, human brands, brand hijacking and parasocial relationships. Findings: Though consumers'... (More)

Purpose: Corporate brands increasingly use influential, high reach human brands (e.g. influencers, celebrities), who have strong parasocial relationships with their followers and audiences, to promote their offerings. However, despite emerging understanding of the benefits arising from human brand-based campaigns, knowledge about their potentially negative effects on the corporate brand remains limited. Addressing this gap, this paper deepens insight into the potential risk human brands pose to corporate brands. Design/methodology/approach: To explore these issues, this conceptual paper reviews and integrates literature on consumer brand engagement, human brands, brand hijacking and parasocial relationships. Findings: Though consumers' favorable human brand associations can be used to improve corporate brand outcomes, they rely on consumers' relationship with the endorsing human brand. Given the dependency of these brands, human brand-based marketing bears the risk that the human brand (vs the firm) “owns” the consumer's corporate brand relationship, which the authors coin relationship hijacking. This phenomenon can severely impair consumers' engagement and relationship with the corporate brand. Originality/value: This paper sheds light on the role of human brands in strategic brand management. Though prior research has highlighted the positive outcomes accruing to the use of human brands, the authors identify its potential dark sides, thus exposing pivotal insight.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Consumer engagement, Human brands, Human-brand based marketing, Parasocial relationships, Relationship hijacking
in
Journal of Service Management
volume
33
issue
3
pages
11 pages
publisher
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
external identifiers
  • scopus:85125814856
ISSN
1757-5818
DOI
10.1108/JOSM-06-2021-0211
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited.
id
9c60214a-fb25-45a0-917f-0d89705c3beb
date added to LUP
2023-02-21 13:09:19
date last changed
2023-02-22 13:27:53
@article{9c60214a-fb25-45a0-917f-0d89705c3beb,
  abstract     = {{<p>Purpose: Corporate brands increasingly use influential, high reach human brands (e.g. influencers, celebrities), who have strong parasocial relationships with their followers and audiences, to promote their offerings. However, despite emerging understanding of the benefits arising from human brand-based campaigns, knowledge about their potentially negative effects on the corporate brand remains limited. Addressing this gap, this paper deepens insight into the potential risk human brands pose to corporate brands. Design/methodology/approach: To explore these issues, this conceptual paper reviews and integrates literature on consumer brand engagement, human brands, brand hijacking and parasocial relationships. Findings: Though consumers' favorable human brand associations can be used to improve corporate brand outcomes, they rely on consumers' relationship with the endorsing human brand. Given the dependency of these brands, human brand-based marketing bears the risk that the human brand (vs the firm) “owns” the consumer's corporate brand relationship, which the authors coin relationship hijacking. This phenomenon can severely impair consumers' engagement and relationship with the corporate brand. Originality/value: This paper sheds light on the role of human brands in strategic brand management. Though prior research has highlighted the positive outcomes accruing to the use of human brands, the authors identify its potential dark sides, thus exposing pivotal insight.</p>}},
  author       = {{Giertz, Johann N. and Hollebeek, Linda D. and Weiger, Welf H. and Hammerschmidt, Maik}},
  issn         = {{1757-5818}},
  keywords     = {{Consumer engagement; Human brands; Human-brand based marketing; Parasocial relationships; Relationship hijacking}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{485--495}},
  publisher    = {{Emerald Group Publishing Limited}},
  series       = {{Journal of Service Management}},
  title        = {{The invisible leash : when human brands hijack corporate brands' consumer relationships}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/JOSM-06-2021-0211}},
  doi          = {{10.1108/JOSM-06-2021-0211}},
  volume       = {{33}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}