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Indulgent or self-controlled? How streamer characteristics and health-threat message framing drive purchase intentions

Author

Listed:
  • Yuan, Yanzhe
  • Surachartkumtonkun, Jiraporn
  • Shao, Wei
  • Maseeh, Haroon Iqbal
  • Zhang, Yaning

Abstract

Health-related live-streaming commerce increasingly relies on streamers to shape consumers' understanding of product claims, yet little is known about how lifestyle-oriented streamer characteristics interact with message framing to influence persuasion. This research aims to examine when and why streamer characteristics enhance or undermine the effectiveness of health-threat communication in live-streaming contexts. Drawing on Schema Congruity Theory and Regulatory Focus Theory, we conduct five pretests and four scenario-based experiments involving 3676 participants across multiple health-related product categories. The studies manipulate streamer characteristics (indulgent vs. self-controlled), health-threat message framing (high vs. low), and consumers' regulatory focus. The results reveal a robust matching effect: self-controlled streamers are more persuasive when delivering high-threat messages, whereas indulgent streamers are more effective when presenting low health-threat information. This congruence increases purchase intentions by enhancing perceived diagnosticity and reducing psychological reactance. Moreover, these effects are contingent on consumers’ motivational orientation—promotion-focused consumers respond more favourably to indulgent streamers paired with low health-threat messages, while prevention-focused consumers show the strongest responses to self-controlled streamers delivering high-threat information. The findings advance research on interactive commerce and health communication by identifying lifestyle-based streamer cues as a key driver of persuasion and by clarifying the psychological mechanisms and boundary conditions underlying these effects. From a managerial perspective, the results highlight the importance of aligning streamer characteristics, message framing, and audience segmentation in health-related live-streaming campaigns.

Suggested Citation

  • Yuan, Yanzhe & Surachartkumtonkun, Jiraporn & Shao, Wei & Maseeh, Haroon Iqbal & Zhang, Yaning, 2026. "Indulgent or self-controlled? How streamer characteristics and health-threat message framing drive purchase intentions," Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services, Elsevier, vol. 91(C).
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:joreco:v:91:y:2026:i:c:s0969698926000019
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jretconser.2026.104722
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