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Purpose

The aim of this study is to investigate how corporate commitment and participatory CSR campaign formats influence consumer responses in the context of racial advocacy, using anti-Asian hate as the focal issue. Data for this study were collected online in July 2022 from US adult consumers.

Design/methodology/approach

The research employs a 3 × 2 factorial experimental design with six stimulus sets (visual CSR social media posts), which varies CSR campaign type (non-participatory, hashtag-sharing and online donation) and level of corporate commitment (advocacy-only versus substantial donation). The study surveyed 502 participants recruited via Prolific and was approved by the authors’ Institutional Review Board.

Findings

Results indicate that high-level corporate commitment significantly enhances consumers’ perceived impact, intrinsic motives, campaign attitudes and purchase intentions. Notably, non-participatory campaigns sometimes outperform participatory ones when consumer involvement requires tangible costs, suggesting that robust corporate action is critical to authentic CSR messaging.

Originality/value

This study contributes to the literature by integrating CRR theory and CSA in the specific context of anti-Asian hate, offering empirical insights into how substantial corporate commitment and participatory design interact. Practically, the findings advise managers to lead with action, namely making a substantial monetary commitment before inviting consumers to co-create racial-justice initiatives.

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