Social media self-branding and success: Quantitative evidence from a model competition
Fabian Braesemann, Fabian Stephany

TL;DR
This study quantitatively demonstrates that active social media self-branding on Instagram increases the likelihood of models winning the Playboy Playmate of the Year award, highlighting social media's impact on success.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence linking social media activity to success in a competitive modeling context, a novel application in this domain.
Findings
Social media activity predicts award outcomes.
Active social media management correlates with higher winning probability.
Social media presence enhances candidate visibility and success.
Abstract
Thanks to the availability of large online data sets, it has become possible to quantify success in different fields of human endeavour. The study presented here contributes to this literature in evaluating the effect of social media activity, as a means of 'self-branding', to increase the chances of models being elected for the Playboy Magazine's Playmate of the Year award. We hypothesise that candidates who actively manage their Instagram accounts can increase their likelihood to win the award: they use social media to gain more followers, who then might vote for them in the award polls. The findings indicate that social media activity actually has predictive capacity to estimate the outcome of the award. We find evidence that candidates who manage their social media accounts more actively than other candidates have a higher probability to become Playmate of the Year. The findings…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Marketing and Social Media · Media Influence and Politics · Social Media and Politics
