Information Sharing on Social Media by Multicultural Individuals: Experiential, Motivational, and Network Factors

Information Sharing on Social Media by Multicultural Individuals: Experiential, Motivational, and Network Factors

Xi Wei Wang, Muhammad Riaz, Sajjad Haider, Khalid Mehmood Alam, Sherani, Mengqing Yang
Copyright: © 2021 |Pages: 25
DOI: 10.4018/JGIM.20211101.oa22
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Abstract

Drawing upon social cognitive & social network theories, this study examines individual-level and network-level factors which potentially affect multicultural individuals’ information sharing behavior via social media. The data has been collected from the foreigners (multicultural individuals) who visited visa centers in three different cities in China. The proposed model tests a combined effect of past sharing experience (PE), trust (TR), perceived benefit (PB), perceived richness (RI), & information sharing attitude (ATT), on information sharing behavior (Beh). The data has been analyzed through Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). The results illustrate PE, TR and PB positively affects ATT which further influences Beh. Since scant studies focus on information sharing behavior of multicultural individuals – this research contributes to the IS literature, particularly to the information sharing via social media in a multicultural perspective. The results are likely to be useful guidance for practitioners and scholars intending to evaluate social media information sharing behavior.
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Introduction

Nowadays, online information sharing has become so convenient that has never been before. Today, social media platforms are turned into interesting multicultural phenomena for sharing information throughout the world. In recent years, the popularity of social media platforms have reached to new heights, as the monthly active users of Facebook surpassed 2.45 billion users having multicultural backgrounds as of 3rd quarter, 2019 (Facebook, 2019). Almost more than half of the world’s population is using social media platforms to receive, share and re-share information (Tan & Lee, 2019). In this globalized world, social media such as Facebook, Twitter, WeChat, etc. provide a favorable environment where information can be shared smoothly and frequently among multicultural individuals, despite their geographical and cultural differences (Boamah, 2018). Longley (2019), defined “multicultural individuals are the members of a society where people with different nationalities, languages, religions and ethnicities living together. People with different cultures have different traditions, lifestyles or imagine of values and ethics (p. 3). Information sharing via social media platforms can broadly be categorized into four – sensitive, sensational, political and causal, having two dimensions: dynamic and static (Lewis, 2010; Boamah, 2018). In addition, the social media platforms such as WeChat, WhatsApp, Facebook, and MySpace deal with the daily usage, sharing and exchange of information to meet the socio-emotional desires of the multicultural users (Shang et al., 2017).

The decision to share information via a medium is psychologically associated with a combination of motivational factors and network factors (Liu et al., 2016). Therefore, individuals cannot deny the perceived benefits (motivational factors) as they can anticipate and expect to acquire while participating in a virtual setup (Zhang et al., 2017). These benefits and values ultimately influence users’ satisfaction which can affect users’ loyalty towards a social medium and their sharing behavior (Lien et al., 2017).

The information sharing behavior via social media varies from culture to culture, people to people and also society to society (Boamah, 2018). There is substantial literature examining information sharing behavior of monocultural individuals; however the literature about multicultural individuals’ information sharing behavior via social media platforms is still sparse. A few studies have investigated the antecedents of Facebook use in a specific culture and environment (Zhang et al., 2019). There are two studies primarily focused on Chinese and Italian cultures that examined the factors affecting users’ intention to share and seek health information on a medium by using net valence model (Li et al., 2018). Another cross cultural research has been conducted to do a comparative analysis of Instagram usage in Croatian and the U.S. culture – evaluated the relation between motives and outcome behavior (Sheldon et al., 2017). Their findings revealed that gratifications of a specific society, nation or masses determine the patterns of social medium (Instagram) usage and further they speculated that user’s culture also plays a moderating role.

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