Garantie de satisfaction à 100% Disponible immédiatement après paiement En ligne et en PDF Tu n'es attaché à rien 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Notes de cours

Crosscultural Online Communication: Summary IBC

Note
-
Vendu
1
Pages
23
Publié le
23-10-2021
Écrit en
2021/2022

Clear summary for the course Crosscultural Online Communication, relevant for second-year students of IBC at Radboud University. It includes everything you need to know for the exam! Using only this summary, I obtained an 8 for the exam.

Montrer plus Lire moins
Établissement
Cours










Oups ! Impossible de charger votre document. Réessayez ou contactez le support.

École, étude et sujet

Établissement
Cours
Cours

Infos sur le Document

Publié le
23 octobre 2021
Nombre de pages
23
Écrit en
2021/2022
Type
Notes de cours
Professeur(s)
Laura speed
Contenu
Toutes les classes

Sujets

Aperçu du contenu

Crosscultural Online Communication

External communication: controlled information stream, marketer generated content (past) —>
less controlled information stream, consumer generated content (now).

E-WOM: electronic word of mouth.
—> E-WOM is one-to-many, asynchronous (meaning that you can still read it years later; it is
independent of time) communication.
—> The credibility of the source relies on the perceived expertise and the perceived
trustworthiness of the review.
—> For example, laypersons have little expertise but are more trustworthy.
—> A rated expert is both trustworthy and are perceived as having a high level of expertise.
—> E-WOM is more influential than traditional WOM, because of its speed, comfort, its one-to-
many format and its absence of face-to-face pressure.

Different types of E-WOM users:
• Opinion leaders: ‘posters’ or ‘e-fluentials’.
• Opinion followers: ‘lurkers’.
—> The 90-9-1 principle for users: 90% is a lurker, 9% is an intermittent contributor and 1% is a
heavy contributor.
—> The 90-9-1 principle for posts: 90% is a heavy contributor who makes up most of the posts,
10% is an intermittent contributor and 0% is a lurker (because they don’t post at all).
—> Conclusion: only 1% of users contribute heavily and are responsible for 90% of the posts.

Motivations to post reviews:
• Ego-focused motivations: self-presentation (to the outside) & when you have been disadvantaged
and want revenge.
• Socially focused motivations: helping others & desire for social interaction.

Positive movie-related tweets get retweeted 15-20% more often: so this implies that positive
reviews occur more often on the internet.

The effect of the review may depend on the type of product.
—> For example, positive reviews are seen as more valuable for products for which the quality of
information is easy to evaluate before purchase.
—: For example, negative reviews are seen as more valuable for products for which the experience
is more important than product characteristic.

Implications for organizations:
• Online reputation management: monitoring your image/reputation.
• Webcare: reading and active on negative messages.
—> It entails directly responding to negative review and the overall audience, ensuring
complainers to stop complaining and showing that the company responds adequately.
—> Best method to do webcare: mediated immediacy.
—> Mediated immediacy: has to be immediate (through the same channel, so public), as soon as
possible (timely), and personal (signed, first person).

• Automatic sentiment analysis: what is the overall company sentiment?
1

,Automatic analysis of reviews (also called opinion mining / sentiment analysis): a computer
evaluates subjective information by scanning positive/negative words, such as ‘very nice’.
—> Limitations: it has difficulty with jargon, emojis, sarcasm, abbreviations, new words, and irony.
—> For example, fake reviews often rely more on superlatives (exaggerated language) to describe
experiences and focus more on external aspects. A computer who has been instructed to pay
attention to these aspects could then, in the future, maybe deduct whether a review is fake or not.
—> This automatic analysis of e-WOM is still in the very early phases.

Lecture 2: Intercultural differences in communication

Model of influence of culture
• Culture can be defined in terms of dimensions, norms, values, ideology, and belief system.
• Individual can be defined in terms of personality, feeling, thinking, attitude, intentions.
• E-WOM communication can be defined in terms of genre, conventions and language use




Hall’s categories:
• Proxemics: people from different cultures perceive space differently.
• Monochronic vs. polychronic: monochronic cultures emphasize order, schedules and
promptness, while polychronic cultures allow multiple things happening at one and they stress
completion of transaction.
• High vs. low context cultures: high-context cultures is about implicit communication which
relies heavily on context, while low-context cultures is about explicit verbal communication (so
they actually say what they mean, unlike high-context cultures).
—> High-context cultures: value harmony, hierarchical values, non-verbal cues; e.g. Japanese.
—> Low-context cultures: value honesty, assertiveness, candidness, direct speech; e.g. US.

Criticism of Halls categories:
• His research mainly uses qualitative methods based on observations (often based on one specific
case), and the method is not documented.
• His concepts are somewhat ambiguous, there is a lack of comparative quantitative data and it has
limited validation.

Hofstede’s models:
• Onion: has values in the middle core of it, being the hardest to find out without being in the
culture, following practices, rituals, heroes and symbols.

2

, Hofstede’s cultural dimensions (dichotomies, which means it consists of two categories, & indices):
• Individualism vs. collectivism: whether people’s self-image is defined in terms ‘I’ or ‘we’.
• Masculinity vs. femininity
—> Masculinity: preference for achievement, heroism, assertiveness, and material rewards for
success. Society is more competitive.
—> Femininity: preference for cooperation, modesty, caring for the weak, and quality of life.
• Long term vs. short term normative orientation (LTO)
—> Long: pragmatic approach; encourage thrift and efforts in modern education as a way to
prepare for the future.
—> Short: maintain time-honoured traditions and norms, view societal change with suspicion.
• Indulgence vs. restraint
—> Indulgence: free gratification of basic and natural human drives (enjoying life and having
fun).
—> Restraint: suppression of gratification of needs, regulated by strict rules.

• Power distance index: degree to which the less powerful members of a society accept and expect
that power is distributed unequally.
• Uncertainty avoidance index: degree to which members of a society feel uncomfortable with
uncertainty and ambiguity, e.g. weak UAI has a more relaxed attitude, strong UAI has rigid codes
of belief and behavior.

Criticism of Hofstede’s cultural dimensions:
• Fallacy of cultural attribution: ‘I encounter a difference, therefore this is a cultural difference.’
• Hofstede defined cultures by nations or language, which
• He assumed that national culture is homogeneous.
• He only looked at employees from only one company (namely IBM).
• The data is outdated: culture doesn’t stand still.
• The questionnaire is limited.
• In-built western bias: the dimensions are chosen from a western point of view.

Consequences of this criticism:
• Take the dimensions as hypotheses, not necessarily as explanatory factors.
• Be aware of points of criticism and mention them.
• Express findings in terms of relativity, use relative terms.
• Make many observations instead of only one.


Text 1: Verbal Communication Styles - Gudykunst & Ting-Toomey

Children are learning values and norms through language.
—> They learn what and who is important (e.g. being polite, certain roles, guilt, correctness…),
how this importance is emphasized and where this importance is emphasized.
—> ‘Verbal interaction styles reflect and embody the affective, moral and aesthetic patterns of a
culture.’ —> This contextualizes how messages should be interpreted.
—> Stylistic mode: ‘tonal coloring given to spoken performance, their feeling tone’.




3
4,49 €
Accéder à l'intégralité du document:

Garantie de satisfaction à 100%
Disponible immédiatement après paiement
En ligne et en PDF
Tu n'es attaché à rien

Faites connaissance avec le vendeur

Seller avatar
Les scores de réputation sont basés sur le nombre de documents qu'un vendeur a vendus contre paiement ainsi que sur les avis qu'il a reçu pour ces documents. Il y a trois niveaux: Bronze, Argent et Or. Plus la réputation est bonne, plus vous pouvez faire confiance sur la qualité du travail des vendeurs.
isabrattinga Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
S'abonner Vous devez être connecté afin de pouvoir suivre les étudiants ou les formations
Vendu
263
Membre depuis
6 année
Nombre de followers
149
Documents
16
Dernière vente
3 semaines de cela
IBC summaries

Hopefully, my summaries will help you to gain a better understanding of the material, and of course, get better grades!

4,3

25 revues

5
10
4
13
3
2
2
0
1
0

Récemment consulté par vous

Pourquoi les étudiants choisissent Stuvia

Créé par d'autres étudiants, vérifié par les avis

Une qualité sur laquelle compter : rédigé par des étudiants qui ont réussi et évalué par d'autres qui ont utilisé ce document.

Le document ne convient pas ? Choisis un autre document

Aucun souci ! Tu peux sélectionner directement un autre document qui correspond mieux à ce que tu cherches.

Paye comme tu veux, apprends aussitôt

Aucun abonnement, aucun engagement. Paye selon tes habitudes par carte de crédit et télécharge ton document PDF instantanément.

Student with book image

“Acheté, téléchargé et réussi. C'est aussi simple que ça.”

Alisha Student

Foire aux questions