Author
Listed:
- Hélène Bussy-Socrate
(LIRSA - Laboratoire interdisciplinaire de recherche en sciences de l'action - Cnam - Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers [Cnam])
- Géraldine Paring
(ESSCA Research Lab - ESSCA - ESSCA – École supérieure des sciences commerciales d'Angers = ESSCA Business School)
Abstract
This article examines how the emerging profession of influencers uses video communications on social media to shape audiences' perceptions of their commercial activities. Managing impressions of these activities is crucial, as they may be perceived as inauthentic and call into question the professionals' self-branding efforts. Taking an interpretive, qualitative approach and drawing on Goffman's Frame Analysis, we investigate how influencers use videos on social media to engage in framing practices that alter how their work is perceived by followers or shift the focus of their attention away from it. We also analyse the active role of audiences in these framing practices and how this is influenced by the technology of video. This study contributes to the growing literature on technological and connective professionalism as well as on impression management in virtual environments, by identifying the framing of work activities as a form of impression management behaviour. It also extends the affordance-based perspective on social media impression management, as well as the theorisation of technology's agentic properties in the constitution of professions, by identifying two novel affordances. The first is the cinematic affordance of video, which allow influencers to use filmmaking techniques to organise and shape the meaning of their work. The second are the protective and disruptive affordances of followers, which influence these impression strategies.
Suggested Citation
Hélène Bussy-Socrate & Géraldine Paring, 2026.
"Framing work on social media: how influencers manage impressions through video,"
Post-Print
hal-05477586, HAL.
Handle:
RePEc:hal:journl:hal-05477586
DOI: 10.1093/jpo/joag005
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