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Drivers of wearable fitness technology adoption for health care: an investigation through organismic integration and regulatory focus theory

Syed Waqar Haider (Department of Business Administration, GC Women University Sialkot, Sialkot, Pakistan)
Hammad Bin Azam Hashmi (Riphah School of Business and Management, Riphah International University – Lahore Campus, Lahore, Pakistan)
Sayeda Zeenat Maryam (Hailey College of Commerce, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan)

International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Marketing

ISSN: 1750-6123

Article publication date: 19 February 2024

Issue publication date: 29 July 2024

193

Abstract

Purpose

In the prior literature, the motivation to adopt wearable fitness technology (WFT) has been linked with either intrinsic or extrinsic. However, how the subcategories of extrinsic motivations (identified, introjected and external) affect the consumers’ WFT adoption decision remains sparse. Furthermore, do regulatory focus (prevention vs promotion) and gender differences the effects of different motivations on WFT adoption is almost unknown in the health-care marketing literature. This study aims to fill the above-mentioned gap and to unfold the WFT adoption beyond the traditional motivation by incorporating the organismic integration theory (part of self-determined theory) and regulatory focus theory.

Design/methodology/approach

This study used a questionnaire-based survey. Using the “AMOS” survey, questionnaire responses of 641 respondents were analyzed and validated by using structural equation modeling. All the variables were adopted from the literature.

Findings

The results show that intrinsic, identified and external motivations have the greatest impact on consumers’ decisions, while introjected motivation was not significant directly. The moderation effects of regulatory focus are significant in such a way that prevention focus influences the introjected motivation and promotion focus affects the external motivation and WFT adoption decision. Furthermore, the findings on gender moderation suggest that women are more intrinsically motivated, and men are more externally motivated for WFT adoption.

Practical implications

The new insights and contributions of this study provide a better understanding of WFT adoption and help sellers develop more effective marketing strategies.

Originality/value

This study incorporates subcategories of extrinsic motivations to provide a deeper understanding of consumers’ behavior. Furthermore, this study applies a unique framework of organismic integration theory to consumers’ WFT adoption. It is also among very few research that investigate regulatory focus and gender impact on consumers’ WFT adoption.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors have acknowledged all the relevant contributors.

Funding: Not applicable.

Conflict of interest: The authors have no conflict of interest to report.

Since submission of this article, the following author has updated their affiliation: Syed Waqar Haider is at the College of Business, American University of Iraq Baghdad, Baghdad, Iraq.

Citation

Haider, S.W., Hashmi, H.B.A. and Maryam, S.Z. (2024), "Drivers of wearable fitness technology adoption for health care: an investigation through organismic integration and regulatory focus theory", International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Marketing, Vol. 18 No. 3, pp. 435-454. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPHM-11-2022-0101

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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