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Blog, Blogger and the Firm: An Analysis of Firm Policies

Rohit Aggarwal
University of Utah - Department of Operations and Information Systems

Ram D. Gopal
University of Connecticut - Department of Operations & Information Management

Ramesh Sankaranarayanan
University of Connecticut - School of Business


March 23, 2007


Abstract:     
Weblogs or blogs have recently received a lot of attention, especially in the business community, with a number of firms encouraging their employees to publish blogs to reach out and connect to a wider audience. It is beginning to be recognized that employee blogs can cast a firm in either a positive or a negative light, thereby enhancing or harming the firm's reputation. Paradoxically, under certain conditions negative postings by employees can actually help the overall reputation of the firm. The rationale for this is that negative posts raise the credibility of an employee blog and attract more readers, who then will also be exposed to the positive posts on the blog. Drawing from the literature on customer advocacy and the stage model theory of information processing in cognitive psychology, we develop a model to decipher the relationship between the extent of negative posts and the overall positive Word of Mouth (WOM) generated by the employee blogs for the firm. An empirical model is developed to account for the inherent non-linearities, endogeneity and unobserved heterogeneity concerns, and potential alternative specifications. Our results suggest that negative posts act as a catalyst to increase the readership of an employee blog, with readership increasing exponentially in the initial stages and then stabilizing. The empirical findings are used to generate an analytical framework that firms can use to formulate employee blogging policies. We illustrate the application of the framework using blogging data from Sun Microsystems.

Keywords: weblogs, blogs, employee blogs, bloggers, blogging policies, word-of-mouth, customer advocacy, information processing theory, non-linear models

JEL Classifications: C10, C23, C51, C52, C80, C87, D78, L10, M50, O33

Working Paper Series

Date posted: April 03, 2007 ; Last revised: January 06, 2010

Suggested Citation

Aggarwal, Rohit, Gopal, Ram D. and Sankaranarayanan, Ramesh, Blog, Blogger and the Firm: An Analysis of Firm Policies (March 23, 2007). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=976121


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Contact Information

Rohit Aggarwal (Contact Author)
University of Utah - Department of Operations and Information Systems ( email )
1645 E Campus Center Drive
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, UT 84112
United States
Ram D. Gopal
University of Connecticut - Department of Operations & Information Management ( email )
368 Fairfield Road
Storrs, CT 06269-2041
United States
Ramesh Sankaranarayanan
University of Connecticut - School of Business ( email )
2100 Hillside Road
U-1041
Storrs, CT 06269-2041
United States
860-486-5217 (Phone)
860-486-4839 (Fax)
HOME PAGE: http://www.sramesh.com/
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