China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Livestream­ers should stick to what they know

-

LI JIAQI, A LIVESTREAM­ING ANCHOR, has been in the spotlight after he recommende­d a particular seller of crabs to his followers in a livestream­ing activity in September. China Daily writer Zhang Zhouxiang comments:

According to a report by Beijing News, the majority of the comments the recommende­d crab provider received were negative, with many who bought the crabs on Li’s recommenda­tion complainin­g the crabs were of very bad quality.

Li said that the crabs he recommende­d are from Yangcheng Lake, which is known throughout the country for its crabs. Yet when the reporter of Beijing News asked the retailer about the crabs it was selling, the reply was they are “of fine quality” but there was no mention of “Yangcheng Lake”. Obviously, Li misreprese­nted the facts.

This is not the first time that Li has faced such a backlash. Earlier this month, Li recommende­d a nonstick pan in his livestream­s, but when his assistant tried to cook eggs in it, the eggs stuck to the pan.

Nor is Li the only livestream­er who has embarrasse­d himself promoting poor quality products. An online search of “livestream­er” “exaggerati­ng products” will return as many as 100 pages of reports.

The key problem is the business model adopted by livestream­ers. The most popular model involves a livestream­er accumulati­ng a large number of followers via his/her performanc­e, getting commercial sponsors, then recommendi­ng the products of these companies.

In this way, the livestream­er provides an advertisin­g platform for companies. However, a livestream­er should not be viewed as a media outlet. The livestream­ers are individual­s, and it is unreasonab­le to expect them to be like media outlets which have staff that can check the quality of products and decide how to make the best advertisem­ents without making exaggerate­d claims.

That’s why many livestream­ers are good at recommendi­ng one kind of products but really bad when stepping outside their profession­al field. For example, Li was good at recommendi­ng lipsticks, but when he turned to nonstick pans and crabs, he had problems.

Maybe livestream­ers can learn a lesson from Li. It is time they concentrat­ed on the fields they know, rather than recommendi­ng products that they are not familiar with.

 ?? JIN DING / CHINA DAILY ??
JIN DING / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States