Good, better, engaged? The effect of company-initiated customer engagement behavior on shareholder value

Sander F.M. Beckers, Jenny van Doorn, Peter C. Verhoef

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

225 Citations (Scopus)
1119 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

In today’s connected world, customer engagement behaviors are very important. Many companies launch initiatives to stimulate customer engagement. However, despite evidence that customer engagement behavior also matters to share-holders, academic research on the firm value consequences of customer engagement campaigns is limited. This study is the first to investigate the value-related consequences of firm-initiated customer engagement behaviors, using shareholder evaluations of the public announcements of such initiatives. We find that companies’ customer engagement initiatives, on average, decrease market value, which is likely because the shareholders are sensitive to the risk of these initiatives backfiring.Nevertheless, initiatives that stimulate word-of-mouth are viewed less negatively than initiatives that solicit customer feedback, as are initiatives that are supported by social media. Companies that operate in a competitive environment or do not advertise much can create value by stimulating customer engagement, while companies with a strong corporate reputation are likely to not benefit from it.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)366-383
JournalJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science
Volume46
Issue number3
Early online date19-May-2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May-2018

Keywords

  • Customer engagement
  • Shareholder value
  • Event study
  • Word-of-mouth
  • WORD-OF-MOUTH
  • SAMPLE SELECTION BIAS
  • FIRM VALUE
  • MANAGEMENT RESEARCH
  • PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
  • BRAND ENGAGEMENT
  • MARKET VALUATION
  • VALUE CREATION
  • CO-CREATION
  • PERFORMANCE

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