I Do Not Buy Your Story! Understanding the Limits of Storytelling in Corporate Social Responsibility Communication.

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Názov: I Do Not Buy Your Story! Understanding the Limits of Storytelling in Corporate Social Responsibility Communication.
Autori: Krenz, Lukas1 (AUTHOR) lukaskrenz@gmx.net, Edinger‐Schons, Laura Marie2 (AUTHOR), Scheidler, Sabrina3 (AUTHOR), Sen, Sankar4 (AUTHOR), Wieseke, Jan5 (AUTHOR)
Zdroj: Psychology & Marketing. Oct2025, Vol. 42 Issue 10, p2557-2573. 17p.
Predmety: *STORYTELLING in business, *SOCIAL responsibility of business, *CORPORATE public relations, *CONSUMER attitudes, *CONSUMER behavior, *CUSTOMER loyalty, SKEPTICISM, PERSUASION (Psychology)
Abstrakt: Storytelling is a popular approach for communicating corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities. However, its effectiveness in this context remains underexplored. This paper investigates the potential downsides of storytelling in CSR communication, particularly its capacity to backfire by evoking consumer skepticism. Across two field experiments (n₁ = 823; n₂ = 5411) with actual customers of a global retailer and one scenario‐based experiment (n₃ = 1175), we demonstrate that storytelling, compared to an expository message format, can increase perceptions of manipulative intent and extrinsic attributions regarding a company's CSR efforts. These effects, in turn, reduce consumer loyalty and purchase behavior. Notably, this backfire effect is pronounced in communication about peripheral CSR activities (e.g., philanthropy) but not embedded CSR initiatives (e.g., employee‐focused programs). By integrating theories of persuasion knowledge, storytelling, and social‐relational framing, our findings challenge the assumption of storytelling's universal efficacy and highlight its context‐dependent outcomes. We offer actionable insights for CSR and communication managers to align storytelling strategies with CSR type and consumer expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Databáza: Business Source Index
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Abstrakt:Storytelling is a popular approach for communicating corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities. However, its effectiveness in this context remains underexplored. This paper investigates the potential downsides of storytelling in CSR communication, particularly its capacity to backfire by evoking consumer skepticism. Across two field experiments (n₁ = 823; n₂ = 5411) with actual customers of a global retailer and one scenario‐based experiment (n₃ = 1175), we demonstrate that storytelling, compared to an expository message format, can increase perceptions of manipulative intent and extrinsic attributions regarding a company's CSR efforts. These effects, in turn, reduce consumer loyalty and purchase behavior. Notably, this backfire effect is pronounced in communication about peripheral CSR activities (e.g., philanthropy) but not embedded CSR initiatives (e.g., employee‐focused programs). By integrating theories of persuasion knowledge, storytelling, and social‐relational framing, our findings challenge the assumption of storytelling's universal efficacy and highlight its context‐dependent outcomes. We offer actionable insights for CSR and communication managers to align storytelling strategies with CSR type and consumer expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ISSN:07426046
DOI:10.1002/mar.22245