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Standing Out While Fitting In: Visual Design of Text Overlays in Social Media Communication

Journal of Marketing 2026 90(1), 132-151
The vast amount of content on social media platforms makes it challenging for firms to create posts that get noticed. An increasingly popular approach to increase customer engagement relies on text overlays, where text is placed directly on images. Such practices raise questions of how to balance the visual and text elements for the best impact. Three key factors, commonly used by practitioners, can trigger engagement because of their visual salience: (1) the degree of dynamism or implied motion in the image as well as the (2) size and (3) centrality of the text overlay. Using multiple methods, including field studies, online experiments, and managerial interviews, the authors establish that a text overlay that is too large and centrally placed, combined with a dynamic image, has negative effects on consumer engagement, because these design combinations make the post visually unappealing. The authors leverage these findings to develop an interactive app that can help managers compose more engaging multimodal social media posts.

How Frontline Employees’ Relational Communication in Online Service Interactions Drives Customer Satisfaction

Production and Operations Management 2026 35(8), 2963-2980
Organizations lose billions of dollars due to inadequate customer service. To improve service, and enhance customer satisfaction, frontline employees’ (FLEs) use of relational communication may be key. During online customer service chats, FLEs provide key information and offer solutions, but they also can build customer relationships through conversations. In this article, we establish how relational perceptions get evoked in conversations and what influences they have for the outcomes of customer service interactions. Accordingly, we present an empirical field study that illustrates how FLEs influence customer satisfaction by mirroring or complementing four key themes, in line with relational communication theory: intimate communication, task orientation, assertiveness, and composure. Our results indicate that FLEs should mimic customers’ use of intimate communication and task orientation, complement their assertiveness, and exhibit high levels of composure. Moreover, FLEs should emphasize their task orientation at the conversation's outset, gradually incorporate more intimate communication as it progresses, and adopt assertiveness late in the service chat. These insights, corroborated by four experimental studies, underscore the significance of FLEs’ relational communication. Our findings highlight the value of training FLEs to tailor their word choices adeptly, and leverage the potential benefits of text-monitoring tools, which can help FLEs increase relational perceptions and satisfaction among their customers.