2020
DOI: 10.1108/qmr-05-2020-0061
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Luxury brands’ use of CSR and femvertising: the case of jewelry advertising

Abstract: Purpose Luxury brands seek to differentiate themselves from competitors by engaging in corporate social responsibility (CSR) practices. Although many luxury brands participate in CSR activities, it is unclear if luxury brands communicate these CSR activities to consumers. Therefore, this study aims to explore two questions: are luxury jewelry brands communicating CSR (including women’s empowerment) in their advertising? And how should luxury jewelry brands communicate CSR messages in their advertising? Desig… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…The analysis involved the development of an 'a priori' coding framework on the basis of existing literature in this domain (Akestam et al, 2017;Eisend, 2010;Furnham and Mak, 1999;McArthur and Resko, 1975;Pankiw et al, 2020), albeit considering the elements of femvertising (Becker-Herby, 2016) and the objective of the study (see table 4 for the coding scheme). Given the specificities of social media (e.g., the format of the posts collected containing one or several pictures, descriptions, and hashtags) each advertisement was subjected to a two-level analysis (Berg, 1998).…”
Section: Analysis and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The analysis involved the development of an 'a priori' coding framework on the basis of existing literature in this domain (Akestam et al, 2017;Eisend, 2010;Furnham and Mak, 1999;McArthur and Resko, 1975;Pankiw et al, 2020), albeit considering the elements of femvertising (Becker-Herby, 2016) and the objective of the study (see table 4 for the coding scheme). Given the specificities of social media (e.g., the format of the posts collected containing one or several pictures, descriptions, and hashtags) each advertisement was subjected to a two-level analysis (Berg, 1998).…”
Section: Analysis and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior research indicates that femvertising is practiced differently for luxury and nonluxury brands. More specifically, Champlin et al (2019) find that nonluxury brands in various product categories (e.g., personal care, food), reflect femvertising in varied ways (e.g., focusing on different aspects such as gender stereotypes, equality), while Pankiw et al (2020) identify that luxury jewellery brands do not adopt femvertising in their printed advertising campaigns. The authors find that most of the luxury jewellery ads contain typical model-like depictions of women of mostly white ethnicity and minimal diversity.…”
Section: Femvertising In Luxury and Nonluxury Brandsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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