The university brand and social media: using data analytics to assess brand authenticity |
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Authors: | James Pringle Samantha Fritz |
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Affiliation: | 1. Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada;2. Department of History, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada |
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Abstract: | Recent economic pressures have demanded higher education institutions respond with strong, authentic brand promises. This mixed method multi-case study explored the authenticity of common brand promises at three Universities in Canada through Twitter and Facebook postings from February to April 2016 using a cloud-based text and network analytic tool. Our study revealed the content shared on social media channels, while largely trustworthy, was fraught with shades of gray and revealed that sometimes brand promises were used against the university when they appeared disingenuous or threatened institutional norms around equity and social justice. Further, social media strategies are still largely limited to push notification suggesting universities are missing opportunities to strengthen their brand and counter negative messaging. For marketing managers it reinforces investments should be directed toward creating engaging and authentic content that can be expressed through multiple touch-points including social media and this can be monitored through low-cost analytic tools. |
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Keywords: | Higher education branding social media authenticity Canada |
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