Do “Flops” Enhance Authenticity? The Impact of Influencers’ Proactive Disclosures of Failures on Product Recommendations
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background and Research Hypotheses
2.1. Influencer Self-Disclosure Strategy: Failure Disclosure
2.2. The Mediating Role of Perceived Authenticity
2.3. The Moderating Role of Observer Self-Discrepancy
2.4. The Moderating Role of Influencer Type
3. Methodology
4. Study 1
4.1. Design
4.2. Procedure
4.3. Measures
4.4. Results
4.5. Discussion
5. Study 2
5.1. Design
5.2. Procedure
5.3. Measures
5.4. Results
5.5. Discussion
6. Study 3
6.1. Design
6.2. Procedure
6.3. Measures
6.4. Results
6.5. Discussion
7. General Discussion
7.1. Key Findings
7.2. Theoretical Implications
7.3. Practical Implications
7.4. Limitations and Future Directions for Research
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
References
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Experimental Situation | Experimental Purpose | Hypotheses Tested | Results | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Study 1 (N = 94) | Real influencer (“Miao Er Ge”) | Main effect Mediating effect | H1 H2 | Yes Yes |
Study 2 (N = 238) | Real influencer (“AWan”) | Moderating effect (observer self-discrepancy) | H1 H2 H3a H3b | Yes Yes Yes Yes |
Study 3 (N= 238) | Fictional influencer (“dailydrunk”) | Moderating effect (influencer follower scale) | H1 H2 H4a H4b | Yes Yes Yes No |
Bootstrapping | BC 95% CI | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
β | SE | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | |
Indirect effect | −0.476 | 0.014 | −0.824 | −0.242 |
Direct effect | −0.0002 | 0.019 | −0.382 | 0.382 |
Bootstrapping | BC 95% CI | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
β | SE | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | |
Indirect effect | 0.458 | 0.010 | −0.704 | −0.274 |
Direct effect | 0.185 | 0.012 | −0.048 | 0.419 |
Bootstrapping | BC 95% CI | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
β | SE | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | |
High self-discrepancy | −0.829 | 0.016 | −1.184 | −0.528 |
Low self-discrepancy | −0.150 | 0.013 | −0.346 | 0.016 |
Bootstrapping | BC 95% CI | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
β | SE | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | |
Indirect effect | −0.674 | 0.011 | −0.909 | −0.470 |
Direct effect | 0.292 | 0.016 | −0.029 | 0.613 |
Bootstrapping | BC 95% CI | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
β | SE | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | |
Macro-influencer | −0.798 | 0.016 | −1.144 | −0.532 |
Micro-influencer | −0.579 | 0.012 | −0.856 | −0.360 |
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Ye, X.; Li, C. Do “Flops” Enhance Authenticity? The Impact of Influencers’ Proactive Disclosures of Failures on Product Recommendations. Behav. Sci. 2025, 15, 971. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070971
Ye X, Li C. Do “Flops” Enhance Authenticity? The Impact of Influencers’ Proactive Disclosures of Failures on Product Recommendations. Behavioral Sciences. 2025; 15(7):971. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070971
Chicago/Turabian StyleYe, Xinge, and Chunqing Li. 2025. "Do “Flops” Enhance Authenticity? The Impact of Influencers’ Proactive Disclosures of Failures on Product Recommendations" Behavioral Sciences 15, no. 7: 971. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070971
APA StyleYe, X., & Li, C. (2025). Do “Flops” Enhance Authenticity? The Impact of Influencers’ Proactive Disclosures of Failures on Product Recommendations. Behavioral Sciences, 15(7), 971. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070971