
Holly Overton
· Associate Professor in the department of advertising/public relations, Director of Master’s Programs and Graduate StudiesVerifiedPennsylvania State University · Mass Communications
Active 2018–2026
About
Holly Overton is a faculty member associated with the Media Effects Research Lab at Penn State. The provided page text does not include specific details about her research focus, background, or key contributions. Therefore, a detailed biography cannot be generated from the available information.
Research topics
- Political Science
- Social psychology
- Psychology
- Advertising
- Sociology
- Business
- Law
- Marketing
- Public relations
- Management
- Economics
Selected publications
Responsibility, Advocacy, and Activism
2026-01-15
book-chapterThis first chapter lays the groundwork for those that follow. Most critically, the authors explicate the concepts of social responsibility and sociopolitical advocacy in relation to one another, as well as a host of similar constructs and subconstructs across the prosocial communication landscape. This chapter aims to define and delimit crucial terms and practices while exploring how they have generally been studied in previous scholarship, particularly within the public relations literature. They close by highlighting the major themes discussed by this book’s contributors and the important implications of their work.
Sociopolitical Advocacy and the Role of Public Relations
2026-01-15
book1st authorCorrespondingCorporate Communications An International Journal · 2025-02-04 · 8 citations
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingPurpose As companies continue to engage in CSA, they continue to struggle with determining what issues they should speak out about and how they can create compelling messages that inspire action. Guided by arguments from issue ownership theory, this study examines CSA message content effects related to two different social-political issues on advocacy behavioral intentions, megaphoning, brand preference and purchase intention. Specifically, the level of advocacy in a CSA message is examined, as well as the manner in which the message is written (narrative vs informational). Furthermore, this study examines the role of perceived authenticity and its impact on an individual’s supportive intentions. Design/methodology/approach This study conducts a 2 (issue: abortion rights vs gun violence) × 2 (level of advocacy: call-to-action (CTA) vs no call-to-action) × 2 (message type: narrative vs informational) between-subjects online experiment using a Qualtrics panel (N = 529) to examine the impact of CSA message features on individuals’ supportive intentions toward the brand. Findings Results indicate a significant interaction effect of issue by advocacy level on advocating behavioral intentions, megaphoning, brand preference and purchase intention, highlighting that companies should advocate more explicitly about some issues than others. The interaction effects of issue type × level of advocacy were completely and significantly mediated by perceived authenticity. Mediation paths revealed that a CTA with the gun violence issue had a significant positive effect on perceived authenticity, whereas a CTA with the abortion rights issue produced a significant negative effect on perceived authenticity. Originality/value This study makes a contribution to a growing body of CSA literature through its examination of CSA message content, which has been understudied in this context. The study findings reveal new insights regarding the interplay between issue type and level of advocacy, highlighting the importance of companies selecting issues carefully and tailoring message content appropriately to have the most impact on message receivers.
Management Communication Quarterly · 2025-02-24 · 5 citations
articleSenior authorStakeholders expect companies to speak out on contentious issues, but such advocacy risks backlash. While much prior research on corporate social advocacy (CSA) has focused on external stakeholders, companies must also consider how advocacy affects employees. Drawing on organizational identification theory, this study uses an experiment ( N = 256) to examine effects of an organization’s decision to engage in advocacy on employees’ attitudes and behavior intentions. We found that when employees agree with an employer decision to tackle a controversial social issue in the form of belief match and view it as authentic, this strengthens their relationship, ultimately resulting in positive outcomes for employers (e.g., loyalty) as well as for social movements (e.g., activism intentions).
Journal of Applied Communication Research · 2025-09-07
articleBetween Innovation and Caution: How Consumers’ Risk Perception Shapes AI Product Decisions
Journal of Current Issues & Research in Advertising · 2025-03-31 · 7 citations
articleJournal of Communication Management · 2025-10-06
article1st authorCorrespondingPurpose This study aims to examine organizational advocacy or the more collective stance-taking efforts in a sports league – the National Basketball Association (NBA) – to see whether an organization can more effectively communicate about its advocacy efforts with different message spokespeople. The study aims to determine whether each respective message source – an athlete, a league commissioner, and the organization itself – could be effective for the NBA to consider using as a spokesperson for advocacy messaging. Design/methodology/approach This study conducts a 3 [message spokesperson: commissioner (Adam Silver) vs. athlete (LeBron James) vs. organization (NBA)] × 2 (advocated issue: abortion vs. gun violence) factorial online experiment between-subjects online experiment using a panel (N = 265) of self-identified sports fans in the USA recruited through the Lucid platform. Findings Liberals with high fan identification perceived the message from LeBron James as less authentic compared to the NBA’s message, leading to lower supportive intentions. Liberals with low or moderate fan identification perceived a message about gun violence as less authentic, which led to lower supportive intentions. Authenticity mediates the relationship between issue and supportive intentions depending on political leaning and fan identification level. Originality/value This paper empirically tests advocacy-related concepts in a sports context, adding new insights to measurement in extant literature and its potential prosocial effects. This study also examines how attitudes toward organizational advocacy can impact the cause itself – extending the understanding of advocacy further by seeing if it impacts society at large.
International Journal of Business Communication · 2025-05-13 · 1 citations
articleDespite a growing number of studies in corporate social advocacy (CSA), little is known about the role of demographic and message factors in shaping consumer reactions toward corporate initiatives. Through a 2 ( gender : male vs. female) × 3 ( age group : 18–34, 35–54, 55+) × 2 ( message strategy : informational vs. narrative) online, between-subjects experiment ( N = 528), we demonstrated that individual factors and message format can influence CSA outcomes. Findings suggested that, after reading a CSA message, males and younger consumers reported higher advocating, megaphoning, purchasing, and brand preference intentions than females and older consumers. Subsequent analyses also revealed that transportation and identification mediated the relationship between message strategy and the outcome variables. Further, the mediation found that male participants and older consumers showed distinct patterns in how transportation and identification influenced their reactions. The implications of these results provide strategic insights to corporate management to design effective CSA messages.
Journal of Promotion Management · 2025-04-01 · 4 citations
articleInternational Journal of Strategic Communication · 2025-07-06 · 1 citations
article
Frequent coauthors
- 25 shared
Kathy Brittain Richardson
- 24 shared
Clifford G. Christians
- 24 shared
Mark Fackler
- 24 shared
William J. Brown
- 24 shared
Yayu Feng
- 24 shared
Peggy J. Kreshel
- 7 shared
Joon Kyoung Kim
University of Rhode Island
- 6 shared
Nandini Bhalla
Labs
Investigates social and psychological effects of technological elements unique to web-based mass-communication.
Education
- 2000
Ph.D., Mass Communications
Penn State University
- 1996
M.A., Advertising
University of Florida
- 1994
B.A., Advertising
University of Florida
Awards & honors
- Page Center Legacy Scholar (2014, 2015, 2018)
- Senior Research Fellow (2020)
- Educator of the Year by the South Carolina Chapter of the Pu…
- Deans' Excellence Award for Integrated Scholarship at Bellis…
- Top Paper Awards from the Association for Education in Journ…
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