How spokespeople help or hurt business through crisis messaging: experiments testing the roles of narratives, non-narratives and counterargument
Corporate Communications: An International Journal
ISSN: 1356-3289
Article publication date: 1 August 2023
Issue publication date: 11 June 2024
Abstract
Purpose
When an audience mentally counterargues a spokesperson, the message is backfiring. In such cases, audience members are practically persuading themselves to take the opposite position advocated by the spokesperson. Yet spokespeople who are professional persuaders serving corporations often seem to instill counterargument. This paper examines the role of counterargument as the conduit through which a spokesperson's different message types affect a company during a crisis. The authors explore the paradox of spokespeople's (in)effectiveness by testing divides in research drawn from normative crisis communication theory, narrative persuasion theory and the theory of reporting bias.
Design/methodology/approach
Two controlled, randomized experiments are reported. Participants (total N = 828) watch video clips of media interviews of a company spokesperson fielding questions about a scandal.
Findings
In the first study, non-narrative information most effectively bolsters purchase intentions and reduces negative word-of-mouth. The effect is mediated by decreased counterargument. The second study replicates the results concerning on-topic narratives compared with spinning, while on-topic narratives and non-narratives perform equally well.
Originality/value
This study addresses conflicts between two distinct traditions of theory as well as between normative crisis communication and its frequent practice. Reducing counterargument matters in the context of non-narrative persuasion, and non-narratives can perform at least as well as narratives in crisis communication.
Keywords
Citation
Clementson, D. and Page, T. (2024), "How spokespeople help or hurt business through crisis messaging: experiments testing the roles of narratives, non-narratives and counterargument", Corporate Communications: An International Journal, Vol. 29 No. 4, pp. 533-549. https://doi.org/10.1108/CCIJ-10-2022-0133
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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