Should employees be “dooced” for a social media post? The role of social media marketing governance

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Should employees be “dooced” for a social media post? The role of social media marketing governance
Abstract
Instances of employees being `dooced' because of a social media post are becoming commonplace. Three research questions are presented to better understand workplace firings due to social media posts using justice theory and social convergence to fit within the nomological net. The first question examines employees' awareness of their employer's social media policy. The second question examines the role of offensiveness in the perceived fairness of the termination. The third question asks whether work-related posts (social convergence) and the presence of a social media policy (social media governance) influence the perception of termination fairness. Two data collection efforts are presented to test the research questions. The research findings extend the social media marketing governance literature by incorporating role theory and script theory. Managerial implications include the importance of developing and communicating to employees the organization's social media policies.
Publication
Journal of Business Research
Date
10/2019
Volume
103
Pages
1-9
Journal Abbr
Journal of Business Research
Citation Key
parkerShouldEmployeesBe2019
Accessed
10/4/19, 7:58 PM
ISSN
01482963
Short Title
Should employees be “dooced” for a social media post?
Language
en
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Extra
11 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Citation Key Alias: lens.org/064-072-744-556-090, pop00132 tex.type: [object Object]
Citation
Parker, J. M., Marasi, S., James, K. W., & Wall, A. (2019). Should employees be “dooced” for a social media post? The role of social media marketing governance. Journal of Business Research, 103, 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2019.05.027