Building a socially responsible global community? Communicating B Corps on social media

Elzbieta Lepkowska-White, Amy Parsons, Bridget Wong, Alexandria M White
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Using signaling theory and corporate communication theory, the study examines whether B Corps market their B Corp status effectively on B Corps' social media sites to determine whether brand equity is being built there for the B Corp label by the B Corp companies themselves.Design/methodology/approachThe authors content analyzed social media activity of 100 randomly selected US B Corps ranging in size and industry type over a two-month period on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. The sample was selected from the listing of the B Corporations on the B Lab website using a skip interval method. The authors searched for preselected keywords within two main categories, one directly mentioning B Corps (such as B Corp logo and B Corp name), and another discussing company social responsibility activities that directly relate to what B Corps do but did not mention the B Corp name.FindingsThe study finds that half of the B Corps had no social media presence. Of those who were active on social media, most B Corps did not mention B Corp status while many of the B Corps discussed social responsibility activities that directly talked about workers, environment, community, and governance, the areas that B Corp certification covers.Research limitations/implicationsThe study indicates that reverse decoupling might better explain communication of B Corp certification on social media than signaling theory. The finding is consistent with more recent research on certifications that shows that obtaining certifications by companies does not have to be followed by marketing certificates even when that could be beneficial. On the other hand, communication of general pro-social claims is consistent with the assumptions of the signaling theory and often used by B Corps. The study suggests why companies market general claims but not a B Corp label. Findings also suggest that when promoting the B Corp label is not done, a firm's internal values are not being expressed externally but when social responsible activities are promoted, a firm's internal values are being expressed externally. The research points to a missed opportunity for B Corps that spend significant resources to get certified. Future studies should employ larger samples with and international companies and venture into other forms of marketing through which B Corp status may be conveyed.Practical implicationsB Corps can easily connect information on the socially responsible activities of B Corps with B Corp status on social media and reap the benefits of B Corps by creating equity for B Corp label on multiple levels. This would also help B-Lab that strives to develop a stronger brand for the B Corps' certification. When consumers know what B Corp stands for, consumers are willing to pay premium prices. Investors are also increasingly interested in companies that care for stakeholders and the environment and are governed in transparent and socially responsible ways.Social implicationsB Corps are described by the B-Lab as a “force for good” that benefits communities, environment and society. Understanding how certifications such as B Corps are communicated to the public and improving how they are communicated can help businesses reap more benefits from B Corps' socially responsible activity and help consumers and investors become educated about such companies so that B Corps can support them. This is important as B-Corps certification is still not well known. Marketing B Corp certification more effectively can help develop a wider and stronger network of businesses that want to do good, investors that want to found socially responsible companies and consumers who want to buy from B Corps. To create such a marketplace B Corps need to be better marketed online.Originality/valueThe study shows that the authors cannot assume that the certifications that companies obtain, often using significant resources and potentially offering many benefits for building brand equity, will be communicated to the stakeholders to reap these benefits. The study provides possible reasons for why companies may not market such endeavors. The study questions assumptions implicit in signaling theory and by using reverse decoupling the study explains why companies may pursue certifications but not market that the companies obtain them even when pro-social certifications have a great potential to differentiate a company among stakeholders that look for socially responsible firms. The study questions what this means for creating a change in business to become a “force for good.”","PeriodicalId":10696,"journal":{"name":"Corporate Communications: An International Journal","volume":"52 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Corporate Communications: An International Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/ccij-01-2022-0005","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

PurposeResearch shows that the majority of investors, consumers and even younger consumers who are interested in social responsibility are unaware of B Corps. Companies spend significant time and money to obtain B Corp status that B Lab, the non-profit that certifies companies, wants to use as a force for good. Using signaling theory and corporate communication theory, the study examines whether B Corps market their B Corp status effectively on B Corps' social media sites to determine whether brand equity is being built there for the B Corp label by the B Corp companies themselves.Design/methodology/approachThe authors content analyzed social media activity of 100 randomly selected US B Corps ranging in size and industry type over a two-month period on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. The sample was selected from the listing of the B Corporations on the B Lab website using a skip interval method. The authors searched for preselected keywords within two main categories, one directly mentioning B Corps (such as B Corp logo and B Corp name), and another discussing company social responsibility activities that directly relate to what B Corps do but did not mention the B Corp name.FindingsThe study finds that half of the B Corps had no social media presence. Of those who were active on social media, most B Corps did not mention B Corp status while many of the B Corps discussed social responsibility activities that directly talked about workers, environment, community, and governance, the areas that B Corp certification covers.Research limitations/implicationsThe study indicates that reverse decoupling might better explain communication of B Corp certification on social media than signaling theory. The finding is consistent with more recent research on certifications that shows that obtaining certifications by companies does not have to be followed by marketing certificates even when that could be beneficial. On the other hand, communication of general pro-social claims is consistent with the assumptions of the signaling theory and often used by B Corps. The study suggests why companies market general claims but not a B Corp label. Findings also suggest that when promoting the B Corp label is not done, a firm's internal values are not being expressed externally but when social responsible activities are promoted, a firm's internal values are being expressed externally. The research points to a missed opportunity for B Corps that spend significant resources to get certified. Future studies should employ larger samples with and international companies and venture into other forms of marketing through which B Corp status may be conveyed.Practical implicationsB Corps can easily connect information on the socially responsible activities of B Corps with B Corp status on social media and reap the benefits of B Corps by creating equity for B Corp label on multiple levels. This would also help B-Lab that strives to develop a stronger brand for the B Corps' certification. When consumers know what B Corp stands for, consumers are willing to pay premium prices. Investors are also increasingly interested in companies that care for stakeholders and the environment and are governed in transparent and socially responsible ways.Social implicationsB Corps are described by the B-Lab as a “force for good” that benefits communities, environment and society. Understanding how certifications such as B Corps are communicated to the public and improving how they are communicated can help businesses reap more benefits from B Corps' socially responsible activity and help consumers and investors become educated about such companies so that B Corps can support them. This is important as B-Corps certification is still not well known. Marketing B Corp certification more effectively can help develop a wider and stronger network of businesses that want to do good, investors that want to found socially responsible companies and consumers who want to buy from B Corps. To create such a marketplace B Corps need to be better marketed online.Originality/valueThe study shows that the authors cannot assume that the certifications that companies obtain, often using significant resources and potentially offering many benefits for building brand equity, will be communicated to the stakeholders to reap these benefits. The study provides possible reasons for why companies may not market such endeavors. The study questions assumptions implicit in signaling theory and by using reverse decoupling the study explains why companies may pursue certifications but not market that the companies obtain them even when pro-social certifications have a great potential to differentiate a company among stakeholders that look for socially responsible firms. The study questions what this means for creating a change in business to become a “force for good.”
建立一个对社会负责的全球社区?在社交媒体上宣传B型企业
研究表明,大多数对社会责任感兴趣的投资者、消费者甚至年轻消费者都不知道B型企业。公司花费大量的时间和金钱来获得B公司的地位,B实验室,一个非营利性的认证公司,想把它作为一种好的力量。利用信号理论和企业沟通理论,本研究考察了B型企业是否在B型企业的社交媒体网站上有效地推销自己的B型企业地位,以确定B型企业自己是否正在为B型企业标签建立品牌资产。设计/方法/方法作者的内容分析了随机选择的100家美国B型企业在Facebook、LinkedIn、Twitter和Instagram上两个月的社交媒体活动,这些企业的规模和行业类型不一。样本是从B Lab网站上的B公司列表中选择的,使用跳过间隔法。作者在两个主要类别中搜索预先选择的关键词,一个直接提到B公司(如B公司标志和B公司名称),另一个讨论与B公司所做的事情直接相关的公司社会责任活动,但没有提到B公司的名称。研究发现,一半的B型企业没有社交媒体。在那些活跃在社交媒体上的人当中,大多数B型企业并没有提到B型企业的地位,而许多B型企业讨论的社会责任活动直接谈到了B型企业认证涵盖的工人、环境、社区和治理领域。研究的局限性/启示研究表明,反向解耦理论比信号理论更能解释B企业认证在社交媒体上的传播。这一发现与最近关于认证的研究一致,该研究表明,获得公司认证后不一定要获得营销证书,即使这可能是有益的。另一方面,一般亲社会要求的沟通与信号理论的假设是一致的,并且经常被B型企业使用。这项研究揭示了为什么企业推销的是一般宣称,而不是B型企业的标签。研究结果还表明,当不推广B公司标签时,企业的内部价值观不会对外表达,但当促进社会责任活动时,企业的内部价值观会对外表达。这项研究指出,花费大量资源获得认证的B型企业错失了机会。未来的研究应采用与跨国公司合作的更大样本,并尝试其他形式的营销,通过这些营销可以传达B公司的地位。实践意义B型企业可以很容易地将B型企业社会责任活动的信息与B型企业在社交媒体上的地位联系起来,并通过在多个层面上为B型企业标签创造公平来获得B型企业的利益。这也将有助于B- lab努力发展一个更强大的品牌为B公司的认证。当消费者知道B型企业代表什么时,他们愿意支付更高的价格。投资者对关心利益相关者和环境、以透明和对社会负责的方式管理的公司也越来越感兴趣。B-Lab将b - Corps描述为有益于社区、环境和社会的“善的力量”。了解诸如B型企业这样的认证是如何向公众传播的,并改进它们的传播方式,可以帮助企业从B型企业的社会责任活动中获得更多利益,并帮助消费者和投资者了解这些公司,以便B型企业能够支持它们。这一点很重要,因为B-Corps认证仍然不为人所知。更有效地推广B型企业认证可以帮助建立一个更广泛、更强大的网络,包括想要做好事的企业、想要建立对社会负责的公司的投资者和想要从B型企业购买产品的消费者。为了创造这样一个市场,B型企业需要更好地在网上进行营销。独创性/价值研究表明,作者不能假设公司获得的认证(通常使用大量资源并可能为建立品牌资产提供许多好处)将传达给利益相关者以获得这些好处。这项研究提供了为什么公司不推销这种努力的可能原因。该研究质疑了信号理论中隐含的假设,并通过反向解耦,该研究解释了为什么公司可能会追求认证,而不是市场,即使亲社会认证有很大的潜力使公司在寻找社会责任公司的利益相关者中脱颖而出。该研究质疑这对于在商业中创造变革以成为一股“向善的力量”意味着什么。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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