Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis

Companies today have branched into Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in an attempt to appear ‘responsible’ to consumers but despite much of the documented researches on its benefits, the area of CSR acting as ‘reputation insurance’ in times of product-harm crisis have not been greatly explored....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ang, Hiang Ling, Chia, Zi Yan, Phua, Mei Qi
Other Authors: Lam Shun Yin
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48169
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-48169
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-481692023-05-19T06:16:14Z Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis Ang, Hiang Ling Chia, Zi Yan Phua, Mei Qi Lam Shun Yin Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Consumer behavior DRNTU::Business::Management::Crisis management Companies today have branched into Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in an attempt to appear ‘responsible’ to consumers but despite much of the documented researches on its benefits, the area of CSR acting as ‘reputation insurance’ in times of product-harm crisis have not been greatly explored. In addition, will this be subjected to changes if there is similarity between the CSR efforts the firm undertakes and the nature of the product-harm crisis? This study focuses on exploring the moderating effects of similarity between CSR efforts and crisis on the relationship between prior CSR efforts and anger felt by consumers in a product-harm crisis. Correlations between anger and trust, as well as between trust and purchase intentions will also be analyzed and discussed in this study to link the negative repercussions of product-harm crises on organizations to the impact on their bottom line - profits. Our findings reveal that anger felt during a crisis for companies with positive CSR is lower than companies with negative CSR regardless of the level of similarity (high or low). Correlation analyses conducted also showed that feelings of anger are negatively correlated with consumer trust and that consumer trust is positively correlated with purchase intention. The hypotheses of moderating effects of similarity were unfortunately unsupported. Our study faced several limitations in areas such as the usage of a fictitious survey scenario and survey guidelines. However, our findings have brought out a few key takeaways. In order to utilize CSR as a ‘reputation insurance’ effectively, managers must constantly manage and review the quality of their CSR efforts, and more importantly, ensure that consumers view them as meaningful and positive. Corporate communication of these CSR efforts as well as managing anger in times product-harm crisis needs to be done adequately in order to insure companies from a bad name. All of these directly impact a firm’s profitability and are difficult to rebuild in consumers’ mind once lost. BUSINESS 2012-03-20T03:23:28Z 2012-03-20T03:23:28Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48169 en Nanyang Technological University 68 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Consumer behavior
DRNTU::Business::Management::Crisis management
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Consumer behavior
DRNTU::Business::Management::Crisis management
Ang, Hiang Ling
Chia, Zi Yan
Phua, Mei Qi
Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis
description Companies today have branched into Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in an attempt to appear ‘responsible’ to consumers but despite much of the documented researches on its benefits, the area of CSR acting as ‘reputation insurance’ in times of product-harm crisis have not been greatly explored. In addition, will this be subjected to changes if there is similarity between the CSR efforts the firm undertakes and the nature of the product-harm crisis? This study focuses on exploring the moderating effects of similarity between CSR efforts and crisis on the relationship between prior CSR efforts and anger felt by consumers in a product-harm crisis. Correlations between anger and trust, as well as between trust and purchase intentions will also be analyzed and discussed in this study to link the negative repercussions of product-harm crises on organizations to the impact on their bottom line - profits. Our findings reveal that anger felt during a crisis for companies with positive CSR is lower than companies with negative CSR regardless of the level of similarity (high or low). Correlation analyses conducted also showed that feelings of anger are negatively correlated with consumer trust and that consumer trust is positively correlated with purchase intention. The hypotheses of moderating effects of similarity were unfortunately unsupported. Our study faced several limitations in areas such as the usage of a fictitious survey scenario and survey guidelines. However, our findings have brought out a few key takeaways. In order to utilize CSR as a ‘reputation insurance’ effectively, managers must constantly manage and review the quality of their CSR efforts, and more importantly, ensure that consumers view them as meaningful and positive. Corporate communication of these CSR efforts as well as managing anger in times product-harm crisis needs to be done adequately in order to insure companies from a bad name. All of these directly impact a firm’s profitability and are difficult to rebuild in consumers’ mind once lost.
author2 Lam Shun Yin
author_facet Lam Shun Yin
Ang, Hiang Ling
Chia, Zi Yan
Phua, Mei Qi
format Final Year Project
author Ang, Hiang Ling
Chia, Zi Yan
Phua, Mei Qi
author_sort Ang, Hiang Ling
title Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis
title_short Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis
title_full Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis
title_fullStr Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis
title_full_unstemmed Moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between CSR efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis
title_sort moderating effects of similarity on the relationship between csr efforts and anger felt during a product-harm crisis
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48169
_version_ 1770563804008022016