| Literature DB >> 34094513 |
Catherine C Pollack1,2, Diane Gilbert-Diamond2,3, Jennifer A Emond1,3, Alec Eschholz2, Rebecca K Evans4, Emma J Boyland4, Travis D Masterson5.
Abstract
Influencer marketing may be amplified on livestreaming platforms (e.g., Twitch) compared with asynchronous social media (e.g., YouTube). However, food and beverage marketing on Twitch has not been evaluated at a user level. The present study aimed to compare users' self-reported exposure to food marketing and associated attitudes, consumption and purchasing behaviours on Twitch compared with YouTube. A survey administered via social media was completed by 621 Twitch users (90 % male, 64 % white, 69 % under 25 years old). Of respondents, 72 % recalled observing at least one food or beverage advertisement on Twitch. There were significant differences in the recall of specific brands advertised on Twitch (P < 0⋅01). After observing advertised products, 14 % reported craving the product and 8 % reported purchasing one. In chat rooms, 56 % observed conversations related to food and 25 % participated in such conversations. There were significant differences in the number of users who consumed various products while watching Twitch (P < 0⋅01). Of users who frequented YouTube (n 273), 65 % reported negative emotions when encountering advertising on YouTube compared with 40 % on Twitch (P < 0⋅01). A higher proportion felt Twitch's advertising primarily supported content creators (79 v. 54 %, P < 0⋅01), while a higher proportion felt that YouTube's advertising primarily supported the platform (49 v. 66 %, P < 0⋅01). The findings support that food marketing exposures on Twitch are noticeable, less bothersome to users and influence consumption and purchasing behaviours. Future studies are needed to examine how the livestreaming environment may enhance advertising effectiveness relative to asynchronous platforms.Entities:
Keywords: Consumer behavior; Eating behavior; Food marketing; Livestreaming
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34094513 PMCID: PMC8141682 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2021.22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Fig. 1.Participant flow diagram.
Demographic characteristics
| Characteristic | Complete data set | Missing data | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | 0⋅2 | ||
| Male | 563 (90⋅2 %) | 111 (65⋅3 %) | |
| Female | 53 (8⋅5 %) | 20 (11⋅8 %) | |
| Other | 5 (0⋅8 %) | 1 (0⋅6 %) | |
| Did Not Answer | – | 38 (22⋅4 %) | |
| Ethnicity | 0⋅2 | ||
| Not Hispanic or Latino | 501 (80⋅7 %) | 108 (63⋅5 %) | |
| Hispanic or Latino | 80 (12⋅9 %) | 10 (5⋅9 %) | |
| Unknown | 11 (1⋅8 %) | 2 (1⋅2 %) | |
| Prefer Not to Answer | 29 (4⋅7 %) | 11 (6⋅5 %) | |
| Did Not Answer | – | 39 (22⋅9 %) | |
| Race | < 0⋅01 | ||
| White | 398 (64⋅1 %) | 84 (49⋅4 %) | |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 11 (1⋅8 %) | 3 (1⋅8 %) | |
| Asian | 145 (23⋅3 %) | 30 (17⋅6 %) | |
| Black or African American | 23 (3⋅7 %) | 2 (1⋅2 %) | |
| Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 2 (0⋅3 %) | – | |
| Other | 38 (6⋅1 %) | 10 (5⋅9 %) | |
| Unknown | 7 (1⋅1 %) | 1 (0⋅6 %) | |
| Prefer Not to Answer | 33 (5⋅3 %) | 11 (6⋅5 %) | |
| Did Not Answer | – | 29 (17 %) | |
| Age | 0⋅5 | ||
| Under 18 | 161 (25⋅9 %) | 28 (16⋅5 %) | |
| 18–24 | 269 (43⋅3 %) | 63 (37⋅1 %) | |
| 25–34 | 168 (27⋅1 %) | 35 (20⋅6 %) | |
| 35–44 | 20 (3⋅2 %) | 3 (1⋅8 %) | |
| 45 and Above | 3 (0⋅5 %) | 2 (1⋅2 %) | |
| Did Not Answer | 39 (22⋅9 %) |
All P-values are from a χ2 test. Note that the ‘Did Not Answer’ category was not included in the tests.
Fig. 2.Recall of advertised products while watching Twitch by product category. Amount of viewership determined by a collapsed 4-point Likert scale ranging from ‘never’ to ‘often,’ with ‘rarely’, ‘sometimes’ and ‘often’ collapsed into ‘at least once.’
Fig. 3.User-reported brand-specific advertisements on Twitch. Percentages are out of those who reported seeing at least one of the twenty-nine mentioned brands (n 485).
Fig. 4.Distribution of product-specific cravings after viewing the advertisement on Twitch. Percentages are out of those who reported craving at least one of the twenty-nine mentioned brands (n 88).
Fig. 5.Distribution of product-specific purchasing after viewing the advertisement on Twitch. Percentages are out of those who reported seeing at least one of the twenty-nine mentioned brands (n 50).
Fig. 6.Comparison of consumption behaviours while watching Twitch across product categories. Amount of viewership determined by a collapsed 4-point Likert scale ranging from ‘never’ to ‘often,’ with ‘rarely,’ ‘sometimes’ and ‘often’ collapsed into ‘at least once.’
Fig. 7.Comparison of cross-platform consumption behaviours across product categories. Amount of viewership determined by a collapsed 4-point Likert scale ranging from ‘never’ to ‘often,’ with ‘rarely,’ ‘sometimes’ and ‘often’ collapsed into ‘at least once.’
Cross-platform behaviours
| Behaviour | YouTube | Twitch | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crave Product After Viewing Advertisement | 0⋅72 | ||
| No | 228 (84 %) | 232 (85 %) | |
| Yes | 45 (16 %) | 41 (15 %) | |
| Purchase Product After Viewing Advertisement | 0⋅23 | ||
| No | 244 (89 %) | 253 (93 %) | |
| Yes | 29 (11 %) | 20 (7 %) | |
| Observe Others Discussing Products | |||
| Never | 182 (67 %) | 128 (47 %) | |
| At Least Once | 91 (33 %) | 145 (53 %) | |
| User Discusses Products | |||
| Never | 238 (87 %) | 206 (75 %) | |
| At Least Once | 35 (13 %) | 67 (25 %) | |
| Amount of Advertising | |||
| Too Little | 5 (2 %) | 10 (4 %) | |
| Just Enough | 103 (38 %) | 187 (68 %) | |
| Too Much | 165 (60 %) | 76 (28 %) | |
| Feeling When Seeing Advertisements | |||
| Happy | 2 (1 %) | 2 (1 %) | |
| Annoyed | 178 (65 %) | 109 (40 %) | |
| Unbothered | 93 (34 %) | 162 (59 %) | |
| Advertisement Purpose to Promote Products | 0⋅04 | ||
| Strongly Agree | 120 (44 %) | 91 (33 %) | |
| Agree | 118 (43 %) | 128 (47 %) | |
| Disagree | 25 (9 %) | 39 (14 %) | |
| Strongly Disagree | 10 (4 %) | 15 (5 %) | |
| Advertisement Purpose to Support Streamers/Content Creators | |||
| Strongly Agree | 55 (20 %) | 81 (30 %) | |
| Agree | 94 (34 %) | 134 (49 %) | |
| Disagree | 81 (30 %) | 44 (16 %) | |
| Strongly Disagree | 43 (16 %) | 14 (5 %) | |
| Advertisement Purpose to Increase Website's Profit | |||
| Strongly Agree | 180 (66 %) | 134 (49 %) | |
| Agree | 78 (29 %) | 119 (45 %) | |
| Disagree | 13 (5 %) | 16 (6 %) | |
| Strongly Disagree | 2 (1 %) | 4 (1 %) |
All P-values are from a χ2 test.