Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South Africa

Background: There is growing evidence that social media addiction is an enduring problem among students. This information can be used by marketers to create specific advertisement campaigns for students to promote organisational branding. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the media...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhikona van Rhyne, Willie Chinyamurindi, Liezel Cilliers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2019-07-01
Series:South African Journal of Information Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajim.co.za/index.php/sajim/article/view/1081
id doaj-bfd4587ce8084aa19c2006a9f209d422
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bfd4587ce8084aa19c2006a9f209d4222020-11-24T22:05:46ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Information Management2078-18651560-683X2019-07-01211e1e710.4102/sajim.v21i1.1081622Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South AfricaZhikona van Rhyne0Willie Chinyamurindi1Liezel Cilliers2Department of Business Management, University of Fort Hare, East LondonDepartment of Business Management, University of Fort Hare, East LondonDepartment of Information Systems, University of Fort Hare, East LondonBackground: There is growing evidence that social media addiction is an enduring problem among students. This information can be used by marketers to create specific advertisement campaigns for students to promote organisational branding. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the mediating role of psychological dependence between social networking sites (SNSs) addiction and attitude towards social networking advertising among a sample of rural students in South Africa. Method: This research adopted a positivist paradigm with a quantitative approach and a descriptive research design. Data were collected using questionnaires, which were distributed to 289 respondents residing within a rural community in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Results: This study found a relationship between: (1) perceived ease of use and habit, (2) perceived ease of use and psychological dependence, and (3) psychological dependence and attitude towards SNSs advertisement. Conclusion: Social media advertising should offer precise location-based targeting and data-driven users’ profiling, segmenting the target market according to preferences, likes and hobbies, through data mining and analytical interpretation of results as these are attributes that are not offered by traditional media.https://sajim.co.za/index.php/sajim/article/view/1081Psychological dependencesocial networking siteshabitease of usesocial networking advertising.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhikona van Rhyne
Willie Chinyamurindi
Liezel Cilliers
spellingShingle Zhikona van Rhyne
Willie Chinyamurindi
Liezel Cilliers
Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South Africa
South African Journal of Information Management
Psychological dependence
social networking sites
habit
ease of use
social networking advertising.
author_facet Zhikona van Rhyne
Willie Chinyamurindi
Liezel Cilliers
author_sort Zhikona van Rhyne
title Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South Africa
title_short Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South Africa
title_full Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South Africa
title_fullStr Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Social network addiction and advertising on social networks: A case study of rural students in South Africa
title_sort social network addiction and advertising on social networks: a case study of rural students in south africa
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Information Management
issn 2078-1865
1560-683X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Background: There is growing evidence that social media addiction is an enduring problem among students. This information can be used by marketers to create specific advertisement campaigns for students to promote organisational branding. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the mediating role of psychological dependence between social networking sites (SNSs) addiction and attitude towards social networking advertising among a sample of rural students in South Africa. Method: This research adopted a positivist paradigm with a quantitative approach and a descriptive research design. Data were collected using questionnaires, which were distributed to 289 respondents residing within a rural community in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Results: This study found a relationship between: (1) perceived ease of use and habit, (2) perceived ease of use and psychological dependence, and (3) psychological dependence and attitude towards SNSs advertisement. Conclusion: Social media advertising should offer precise location-based targeting and data-driven users’ profiling, segmenting the target market according to preferences, likes and hobbies, through data mining and analytical interpretation of results as these are attributes that are not offered by traditional media.
topic Psychological dependence
social networking sites
habit
ease of use
social networking advertising.
url https://sajim.co.za/index.php/sajim/article/view/1081
work_keys_str_mv AT zhikonavanrhyne socialnetworkaddictionandadvertisingonsocialnetworksacasestudyofruralstudentsinsouthafrica
AT williechinyamurindi socialnetworkaddictionandadvertisingonsocialnetworksacasestudyofruralstudentsinsouthafrica
AT liezelcilliers socialnetworkaddictionandadvertisingonsocialnetworksacasestudyofruralstudentsinsouthafrica
_version_ 1725824692718141440