Publication:
When more likes is not better: the consequences of high and low likes-to-followers ratios for perceived account credibility and social media marketing effectiveness

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers
Publication date
2019-09-02
Defense date
Advisors
Tutors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Impact
Google Scholar
Export
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
Previous research on social media marketing assumes that the more followers or “likes” an individual or company has on social media, the better. The current research is the first that challenges this assumption by showing that people make inferences about the credibility of social media accounts based on the number of likes a post receives relative to the size of its likely audience. The findings indicate that high as well as low likes-to-followers ratios negatively influence the perceived credibility of the account and, as such, dampen social media marketing effectiveness. The addition of hashtags is identified as a way to guard against the negative impact of high likes-to-followers ratios. Managers, (aspiring) influencers, and people in general involved in (personal) branding on social media can use the present findings to maximize the effectiveness of their social media marketing strategy.
Description
Keywords
Social media marketing, Instagram, Likes, Followers, Hashtag, Credibility
Bibliographic citation
De Vries, E. L. E. (2019). When more likes is not better: the consequences of high and low likes-to-followers ratios for perceived account credibility and social media marketing effectiveness. Marketing Letters, 30 (3-4), pp. 275-291.