Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialism

This research explores the role of materialism, and social comparison to brand addiction in relation to compulsive buying. A structural equation modeling was used to analyze data through partial least squares by collecting online data in Vietnam. The research findings explain social comparison is an...

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Main Author: Minh T.H. Le
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-11-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844020323033
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spelling doaj-2c51736518864067be683a0d40a805662020-12-09T06:25:02ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402020-11-01611e05460Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialismMinh T.H. Le0Corresponding author.; School of International Business and Marketing, University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City, Viet NamThis research explores the role of materialism, and social comparison to brand addiction in relation to compulsive buying. A structural equation modeling was used to analyze data through partial least squares by collecting online data in Vietnam. The research findings explain social comparison is an antecedent leading to addictive behavior. Materialism mediates and increases the addictive behavior when consumers are significantly impacted by social comparison. In addition, brand addiction leads to word-of-mouth and willingness to pay premium price when consumers are set under social comparison and materialistic tendency. The managerial and theoretical application is also provided in this research.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844020323033Consumer-brand relationshipsBrand addictionSocial comparisonMaterialismMarketingConsumer attitude
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Minh T.H. Le
spellingShingle Minh T.H. Le
Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialism
Heliyon
Consumer-brand relationships
Brand addiction
Social comparison
Materialism
Marketing
Consumer attitude
author_facet Minh T.H. Le
author_sort Minh T.H. Le
title Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialism
title_short Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialism
title_full Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialism
title_fullStr Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialism
title_full_unstemmed Social comparison effects on brand addiction: A mediating role of materialism
title_sort social comparison effects on brand addiction: a mediating role of materialism
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2020-11-01
description This research explores the role of materialism, and social comparison to brand addiction in relation to compulsive buying. A structural equation modeling was used to analyze data through partial least squares by collecting online data in Vietnam. The research findings explain social comparison is an antecedent leading to addictive behavior. Materialism mediates and increases the addictive behavior when consumers are significantly impacted by social comparison. In addition, brand addiction leads to word-of-mouth and willingness to pay premium price when consumers are set under social comparison and materialistic tendency. The managerial and theoretical application is also provided in this research.
topic Consumer-brand relationships
Brand addiction
Social comparison
Materialism
Marketing
Consumer attitude
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844020323033
work_keys_str_mv AT minhthle socialcomparisoneffectsonbrandaddictionamediatingroleofmaterialism
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