Gender Inequality in the Influencer Marketing Industry: Is the New Era of Entrepreneurship Replicating Traditional Norms in the Digital Sphere?Tools Sultana, Eriko (2019) Gender Inequality in the Influencer Marketing Industry: Is the New Era of Entrepreneurship Replicating Traditional Norms in the Digital Sphere? [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)]
AbstractThis paper explores the gender inequalities that exist within the influencer marketing industry in Bangladesh. The overarching research question that it strives to answer is “Is the new era of entrepreneurship replicating traditional norms in the digital sphere?” Ideas are drawn from existing literature on social media, gender roles amongst digital entrepreneurs and social media influencers (SMIs), income inequality, and self-branding, namely the understanding that heteronormative ideas about gender greatly influence an individual’s behaviour as a digital entrepreneur. Prescribed gender roles often have cultural implications in terms of social decorum, modesty, and other norms, causing SMIs to behave accordingly. It was ascertained that most of the literature that exists about the nascent influencer marketing industry has largely overlooked developing countries and attempts to fill this gap by being one of the pioneering studies on SMIs in developing countries.
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