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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Online support for vulnerable consumers: a safe place?

Joy ParkinsonLisa SchusterHeini TaiminenRory Mulcahy

subject

verkkomainontamedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.medical_treatmentInternet privacyWord countpalvelualaSupport groupSocial supportasiakkaatOriginality0502 economics and businessmedicineMarketingverkkopalvelutmedia_commonMarketingService (business)Netnographybusiness.industryonline support05 social sciencesTransformative learningpalvelumarkkinointiAction (philosophy)markkinointi050211 marketingvulnerable consumersbusinessPsychology050203 business & management

description

Purpose This paper aims to examine the service experience in an online support community of consumers to understand the nature of social support and how it is experienced and enacted by vulnerable consumers. Design/methodology/approach A netnographic study was conducted to examine vulnerable consumers’ participation in an online support group for weight management. The Linguistic Inquiry Word Count (LIWC) program was used, and additionally data were coded using open coding. A hybrid approach to data analysis was undertaken using inductive and deductive methods. Findings The findings suggest online social support groups can be used as an online “third place” to support vulnerable consumers, with vulnerable groups engaging with the online support group differently than those in the normal weight group. Social support was also found to be bi-directional in nature. Research limitations/implications This study only investigates one online support group. To gain deeper insights, other support groups should be examined over a longer period. Practical implications This paper demonstrates that transformative services have the hidden capacity to optimize their services to enable vulnerable consumers to co-create social support in a safe place, thus providing a non-judgmental environment with the end goal of improving their health and well-being. Social implications Findings reveal how services can enable marginalization and stigmatization to be overcome and inspire social action through the use of online support groups. Originality/value This research is unique in that it used a netnography approach to examine how vulnerable consumers interact in an online service setting, reducing self-report bias and allowing for a natural research setting, thus allowing a unique understanding of how vulnerable consumers experience and enact social support.

https://doi.org/10.1108/jsm-05-2016-0197