“…research in online marketing focuses on measuring persuasiveness of an argument using self-reported surveys (Caldas et al 2019;Gerlach, Buxmann, and Dinev 2019), or by quantifying how responsive individuals are to tailored arguments in an online survey (Axt, Landau, and Kay 2020;Ormond, Warkentin, and Crossler 2019;Wang et al 2021b). While there have been recent advances in understanding persuasion and attitudes towards products and marketing campaigns (Wang et al 2021a;Pignot, Nicolini, and Thompson 2020)), the studies are not entirely practical (e.g., using executive messaging for interviews (Pignot, Nicolini, and Thompson 2020)) or do not extract direct intentions to purchase (Wang et al 2021a). Hence, the motivation for this paper is to provide social researchers with a dataset to extract social support for an online campaign as well as users intentions; thereby providing researchers with a new way to conduct quantitative studies about buying intentions and support, which can potentially be used for downstream research on persuasion and social manipulation.…”