Consumer brand-cyberbullying in online brand communities: A conceptual and empirical extension

Companies like Manchester United and Nike host some of the largest online communities on social media to promote their brands. Increasingly, these communities experience incidents of cyberbullying amongst their members. Drawing on research from information studies, psychology, and marketing, we repo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Authors: Breitsohl, Jan, Jiménez Torres, Nadia Huitzilin, Roschk, Holger, Megicks, P.R., Aagerup, U.
Format: article
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2025
Country:España
Institution:Universidad de Burgos (UBU)
Repository:Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Burgos (RIUBU)
OAI Identifier:oai:riubu.ubu.es:10259/11055
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10259/11055
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Aggression
Consumer-toconsumer interactions
Cyberbullying
Online communities
Social media
Ciberacoso
Consumidores
Consumers
Description
Summary:Companies like Manchester United and Nike host some of the largest online communities on social media to promote their brands. Increasingly, these communities experience incidents of cyberbullying amongst their members. Drawing on research from information studies, psychology, and marketing, we report on observations of eight online brand communities to reveal four conceptual elements – Aggression, Interpersonality, Reinforcing Platform Architecture, and Identity Focus – of consumer brand-cyberbullying (Study 1). Subsequently, we use survey data to show that a key explanation for why consumers who identify with brands bully others lies in their materialistic aspirations, and the extent of this depends on their online community participation, prior cyber-bullying experiences, and brand involvement (Study 2). Our findings provide insights for companies in shaping their policies and interventions to address this problematic behavior of online consumers.