Abstract
Given the growing importance of health-related advertising, in our research we examined how the persuasiveness of health-related advertisements is affected by a new antecedent: stress, a universal and draining experience. A series of five studies (including one survey and four experiments) revealed that people are more willing to comply with health-related advertising when they feel stressed. This is because stress increases consumers’ tendency to avoid risk, which consequently prompts their compliance with health-related advertising. Moreover, consumers’ promotion focus was found to be a boundary condition for the effect of stress on compliance with health-related advertising, with the effect being weaker among promotion-focused consumers. Our findings not only reveal a novel variable that could promote health compliance but also suggest what marketers should do to bolster the effectiveness of health-related advertising.
| Original language | English | 
|---|---|
| Article number | 115328 | 
| Journal | Journal of Business Research | 
| Volume | 193 | 
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Apr 2025 | 
Keywords
- Health compliance
- Promotion focus
- Risk avoidance
- Stress