Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise Tactics

While engaging in corporate social responsibility (CSR) has gradually become mainstream in the business context, the investigation of CSR communication and its effectiveness remains limited. This study examines how environmental CSR communication affects consumer perception and behavior through an e...

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Main Authors: Julia Christis, Yijing Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/7/3981
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spelling doaj-fb7b56ed2d7d4f7dbf215ab7e0abebc02021-04-02T23:06:00ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-04-01133981398110.3390/su13073981Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise TacticsJulia Christis0Yijing Wang1Department of Media and Communication, Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication (ESHCC), Erasmus University Rotterdam, 3062PA Rotterdam, The NetherlandsDepartment of Media and Communication, Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication (ESHCC), Erasmus University Rotterdam, 3062PA Rotterdam, The NetherlandsWhile engaging in corporate social responsibility (CSR) has gradually become mainstream in the business context, the investigation of CSR communication and its effectiveness remains limited. This study examines how environmental CSR communication affects consumer perception and behavior through an experiment design. We distinguish three CSR communication factors—message content (climate responsibility vs. sustainable use of natural resources), message style (greenhushing vs. uniform vs. greenwashing) and praise tactics (consumer praise vs. company praise)—and assess their impacts on consumer trust, purchase intention and consumer advocacy, respectively. We also investigate the moderating role of attributed intrinsic and extrinsic corporate motives on engaging in environmental CSR. An online experiment (N = 304) revealed that a uniform message style outperforms the other two styles, whereas greenwashing is found to be least effective. In addition, attributed intrinsic corporate motives moderate the impacts of environmental CSR communication on consumer trust, purchase intention and consumer advocacy, respectively. No moderation effect was found for attributed extrinsic corporate motives. The findings provide important implications for effective environmental CSR communication with respect to specific message styles and attributed corporate motives.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/7/3981CSR communicationcorporate motivesconsumer trustpurchase intentionconsumer advocacy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Christis
Yijing Wang
spellingShingle Julia Christis
Yijing Wang
Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise Tactics
Sustainability
CSR communication
corporate motives
consumer trust
purchase intention
consumer advocacy
author_facet Julia Christis
Yijing Wang
author_sort Julia Christis
title Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise Tactics
title_short Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise Tactics
title_full Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise Tactics
title_fullStr Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise Tactics
title_full_unstemmed Communicating Environmental CSR towards Consumers: The Impact of Message Content, Message Style and Praise Tactics
title_sort communicating environmental csr towards consumers: the impact of message content, message style and praise tactics
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-04-01
description While engaging in corporate social responsibility (CSR) has gradually become mainstream in the business context, the investigation of CSR communication and its effectiveness remains limited. This study examines how environmental CSR communication affects consumer perception and behavior through an experiment design. We distinguish three CSR communication factors—message content (climate responsibility vs. sustainable use of natural resources), message style (greenhushing vs. uniform vs. greenwashing) and praise tactics (consumer praise vs. company praise)—and assess their impacts on consumer trust, purchase intention and consumer advocacy, respectively. We also investigate the moderating role of attributed intrinsic and extrinsic corporate motives on engaging in environmental CSR. An online experiment (N = 304) revealed that a uniform message style outperforms the other two styles, whereas greenwashing is found to be least effective. In addition, attributed intrinsic corporate motives moderate the impacts of environmental CSR communication on consumer trust, purchase intention and consumer advocacy, respectively. No moderation effect was found for attributed extrinsic corporate motives. The findings provide important implications for effective environmental CSR communication with respect to specific message styles and attributed corporate motives.
topic CSR communication
corporate motives
consumer trust
purchase intention
consumer advocacy
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/7/3981
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AT yijingwang communicatingenvironmentalcsrtowardsconsumerstheimpactofmessagecontentmessagestyleandpraisetactics
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