2017
DOI: 10.1177/0093650216689161
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Visual CSR Messages and the Effects of Emotional Valence and Arousal on Perceived CSR Motives, Attitude, and Behavioral Intentions

Abstract: Companies have frequently used visuals (e.g., still images and videos) as part of their corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication strategies, and those visuals often contain emotional content. As yet, however, scholars and practitioners have little understanding of how emotional design influences the effectiveness of CSR communication. This study examined how the emotional valence and arousal generated from contextual images in CSR messages affected the perceived CSR motives of companies, attitude to… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(57 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
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“…Past research has predominantly analyzed the textual contents of CSR websites (Tagesson et al, 2009;Tang et al, 2015;Vollero et al, 2019), which was often limited to specific industries (an exception is: Ott, Wang, & Bortree, 2016) or CSR-related topics on websites such as diversity (Pasztor, 2019), but has neither focused on websites' visual content nor taken into account the whole website. Visuals have played a role in CSR communication research so far mostly on the effects side (Chung & Lee, 2017), or in industry-specific analyses of CSR reports (Lock & Seele, 2015). However, analyses that stretch beyond single industries' or countries' samples are lacking (Tuan et al, 2019).…”
Section: Routes Of Csr Communicationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Past research has predominantly analyzed the textual contents of CSR websites (Tagesson et al, 2009;Tang et al, 2015;Vollero et al, 2019), which was often limited to specific industries (an exception is: Ott, Wang, & Bortree, 2016) or CSR-related topics on websites such as diversity (Pasztor, 2019), but has neither focused on websites' visual content nor taken into account the whole website. Visuals have played a role in CSR communication research so far mostly on the effects side (Chung & Lee, 2017), or in industry-specific analyses of CSR reports (Lock & Seele, 2015). However, analyses that stretch beyond single industries' or countries' samples are lacking (Tuan et al, 2019).…”
Section: Routes Of Csr Communicationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This lack is particularly striking as visuals foster re-tweeting behavior (Araujo, Neijens, & Vliegenthart, 2015) in different industries (Soboleva, Burton, Mallik, & Khan, 2017). Furthermore, as a relevant factor when engaging in a dialogue (Johansen & Ellerup Nielsen, 2011), images evoke emotions in audiences (Chung & Lee, 2017), which is particularly relevant for moralized communication as in the context of CSR (Glozer & Morsing, 2019).…”
Section: Routes Of Csr Communicationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Prior literature shows that primarily there are two types of perceived motives for the CSR of the companies, which are the public-serving and self-serving motives [15,[27][28][29]. For instance, Chung and Lee argued public-serving motives of CSR as efforts which are undertaken to benefit society or a cause that the company supports [28]. Whereas, self-serving motives of the CSR activities are those activities which are undertaken to benefit the company.…”
Section: Csr Motivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous research has focused on the influence of discrete components of aid requests on giving, including affective images (Burt & Strongman, 2000;Chung & Lee, 2019;Fisher & Ma, 2014;Genevsky, Vastfjall, Slovic, & Knutson, 2013;Small & Verrochi, 2009) and message framing (Chang & Lee, 2009;Erlandsson, Västfjäll, Sundfelt, & Slovic, 2016;Fisher, Vandenbosch, & Antia, 2017). This body of findings has generated a number of compellingbut often competingpredictions (Erlandsson, Björklund, & Bäckström, 2015;Erlandsson, Nilsson, & Västfjäll, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%