Dwindle the swindle

This paper presents “Dwindle the Swindle”, a communications campaign that aims to raise vigilance against e-commerce scams in Singapore. The campaign targets young adults aged 21 to 30 who shop on two-sided e-commerce platforms. E-commerce scams, usually fraudulent transactions that take place on tw...

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Main Authors: Chang, Reis Kai Lin, Teo, Felicia Yu Qian, Tew, Xuan Na, Yuan, Chenyue
Other Authors: Kang Hyunjin
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147210
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1472102023-03-05T16:11:26Z Dwindle the swindle Chang, Reis Kai Lin Teo, Felicia Yu Qian Tew, Xuan Na Yuan, Chenyue Kang Hyunjin Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information hjkang@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns This paper presents “Dwindle the Swindle”, a communications campaign that aims to raise vigilance against e-commerce scams in Singapore. The campaign targets young adults aged 21 to 30 who shop on two-sided e-commerce platforms. E-commerce scams, usually fraudulent transactions that take place on two-sided e-commerce platforms, result in monetary loss and/or the compromise of personal information. Our formative research found that our target audience’s perceived susceptibility towards e-commerce scams was low. Furthermore, although they were aware of the various measures that they could adopt to avoid getting scammed, they were still unable to spot e-commerce scams. Guided by the Protection Motivation Theory (PMT), the campaign aimed to increase vigilance against e-commerce scams through primarily enhancing perceived susceptibility, self-efficacy and behaviour intention. To achieve our objectives, we formulated our big idea: To sensitise our target audience to e-commerce scams by humanising the experience of falling victim to one. We did so by evoking an emotional connection to the issue, while educating them on the fact that they can be a victim of e-commerce scams too. Some key tactics include scam experience videos, targeted “scam” ads, a livestream session and an e-commerce scam quiz. A post-campaign evaluation measured our output and analysed our post-campaign results and our impact objectives. Results showed that the campaign successfully increased threat and coping appraisals with most output objectives achieved. The paper also discusses the campaign’s advantages, limitations, sustainability as well as advice for future scam campaigns. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2021-04-08T02:58:09Z 2021-04-08T02:58:09Z 2021 Final Year Project (FYP) Chang, R. K. L., Teo, F. Y. Q., Tew, X. N. & Yuan, C. (2021). Dwindle the swindle. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147210 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147210 en SCI20001 application/pdf application/vnd.ms-excel application/vnd.ms-excel application/pdf application/msword application/vnd.ms-powerpoint application/vnd.ms-powerpoint application/vnd.ms-excel text/html Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns
Chang, Reis Kai Lin
Teo, Felicia Yu Qian
Tew, Xuan Na
Yuan, Chenyue
Dwindle the swindle
description This paper presents “Dwindle the Swindle”, a communications campaign that aims to raise vigilance against e-commerce scams in Singapore. The campaign targets young adults aged 21 to 30 who shop on two-sided e-commerce platforms. E-commerce scams, usually fraudulent transactions that take place on two-sided e-commerce platforms, result in monetary loss and/or the compromise of personal information. Our formative research found that our target audience’s perceived susceptibility towards e-commerce scams was low. Furthermore, although they were aware of the various measures that they could adopt to avoid getting scammed, they were still unable to spot e-commerce scams. Guided by the Protection Motivation Theory (PMT), the campaign aimed to increase vigilance against e-commerce scams through primarily enhancing perceived susceptibility, self-efficacy and behaviour intention. To achieve our objectives, we formulated our big idea: To sensitise our target audience to e-commerce scams by humanising the experience of falling victim to one. We did so by evoking an emotional connection to the issue, while educating them on the fact that they can be a victim of e-commerce scams too. Some key tactics include scam experience videos, targeted “scam” ads, a livestream session and an e-commerce scam quiz. A post-campaign evaluation measured our output and analysed our post-campaign results and our impact objectives. Results showed that the campaign successfully increased threat and coping appraisals with most output objectives achieved. The paper also discusses the campaign’s advantages, limitations, sustainability as well as advice for future scam campaigns.
author2 Kang Hyunjin
author_facet Kang Hyunjin
Chang, Reis Kai Lin
Teo, Felicia Yu Qian
Tew, Xuan Na
Yuan, Chenyue
format Final Year Project
author Chang, Reis Kai Lin
Teo, Felicia Yu Qian
Tew, Xuan Na
Yuan, Chenyue
author_sort Chang, Reis Kai Lin
title Dwindle the swindle
title_short Dwindle the swindle
title_full Dwindle the swindle
title_fullStr Dwindle the swindle
title_full_unstemmed Dwindle the swindle
title_sort dwindle the swindle
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147210
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