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For all to see: social risk and observable complaining on Facebook

Christine Armstrong (Newcastle Business School, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Australia)
Alicia Kulczynski (Newcastle Business School, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Australia)
Stacey Brennan (Sydney Business School, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia)

European Journal of Marketing

ISSN: 0309-0566

Article publication date: 14 October 2021

Issue publication date: 3 January 2022

850

Abstract

Purpose

Online consumer complaint behaviour that is observable to other consumers provides the firm with an opportunity to demonstrate transparency and service quality to the public eye. The purpose of this paper is to assist practitioners with a strategy to increase perceived accommodativeness in complaint management on social media and reduce the social risk associated with online consumer complaint behaviour using a social exchange theory perspective.

Design/methodology/approach

Six online experiments with 1,350 US Facebook users were conducted to investigate the effect of supportive and non-supportive virtually present others, and employee intervention on a consumer’s choice to complain, likelihood to make an observable complaint (on the Facebook page) and likelihood to make a non-observable complaint (via Facebook Messenger). The mediating role of perceived accommodativeness and subsequent social risk is also examined.

Findings

Supportive comments made to the complainant by virtually present others were found to influence participants’ decision to complain, heighten participants’ likelihood to complain about the Facebook page and reduce their likelihood to complain via Facebook Messenger. This effect was reversed in the presence of non-supportive virtually present others and was explained by perceived social risk. Further, a participant’s likelihood to complain about the Facebook page was increased when an employee intervention was directed at a non-supportive comment made to a complainant, by a virtually present other. This effect was explained by the perceived accommodativeness of the employee interaction.

Research limitations/implications

The findings advance research on online consumer complaint behaviour by investigating how employee intervention can be used to increase the likelihood of an observable complaint. This research is limited in that it does not incorporate individual characteristics, such as introversion/extroversion and propensity to respond to peer pressure, which may affect participant responses.

Practical implications

This research shows that perceptions of social risk are most effectively reduced by employee intervention directed at a non-supportive comment (made to a complainant) of a virtually present other. Consumer complaint management strategies aimed at minimising perceptions of social risk and encouraging observable online complaint behaviour are proposed.

Originality/value

This research extends the consumer complaint behaviour taxonomy by introducing the term “observable complaining”, that is, visible complaints made on a Facebook page, and broadens understanding of the organisation’s role in managing non-supportive virtually present others to assuage perceptions of social risk in potential complainants.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the Newcastle Business School and The College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle, for sponsoring this study.

Citation

Armstrong, C., Kulczynski, A. and Brennan, S. (2022), "For all to see: social risk and observable complaining on Facebook", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 56 No. 1, pp. 31-71. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-07-2020-0517

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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