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The role of ideal self-congruence and brand attachment in consumers’ negative behaviour: compulsive buying and external trash-talking

The role of ideal self-congruence and brand attachment in consumers’ negative behaviour: compulsive buying and external trash-talking
The role of ideal self-congruence and brand attachment in consumers’ negative behaviour: compulsive buying and external trash-talking

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate the role of ideal self-congruence in instigating two types of negative consumer behaviours – compulsive buying and external trash-talking – and the mediating role of brand attachment on these relationships. Design/methodology/approach: Two studies were designed using a structural equation modelling methodology. Study 1a was based on a mail survey of 280 respondents, whereas Study 1b was based on an electronic survey of 152 respondents. Study 1b was conducted to test the external validity of the research model. Findings: In Study 1a, ideal self-congruence affects emotional brand attachment and in turn emotional brand attachment affects compulsive buying behaviour and external trash-talking. The mediation analysis indicates that emotional brand attachment mediates the relationships. Study 1b offers support to the results of Study 1a. Practical implications: From a practical point of view, this study is useful for policymakers seeking to regulate and prevent excessive consumerism. For marketers, they should understand that brand attachment leads to compulsive buying and external trash-talking, which may provide immediate benefit for the brand or the firm. However, marketers should understand that these two negative behaviours may harm the firm image and consumers’ well-being in the long run. Social implications: Apart from practical implications, firms should consider alleviating compulsive buying, as it is harmful to society. Similarly, excessive external trash-talking may lead to physical aggression. Consumers expect firms to be socially responsible. Thus, firms should start conducting activities that promote responsible shopping and reduce external trash-talking. Originality/value: The study highlights a dark side of ideal self-congruence and brand attachment. The results suggest that ideal self-congruence with the help of emotional brand attachment predicts compulsive buying behaviour and external trash-talking. This may not only damage brand image but also the consumers’ well-being.

Brand attachment, Compulsive buying, External trash-talking, Ideal self-congruence, Negative behaviour
0309-0566
683-701
Japutra, Arnold
004a3f8c-4d07-4cc7-8660-c5b3a5983760
Ekinci, Yuksel
4b14fabd-b126-4462-beda-91d427230cda
Simkin, Lyndon
e2424e42-6230-4f87-a509-8eb542a4ff80
Nguyen, Bang
9a22b358-9ee4-44b7-8147-87e742ca7ff1
Japutra, Arnold
004a3f8c-4d07-4cc7-8660-c5b3a5983760
Ekinci, Yuksel
4b14fabd-b126-4462-beda-91d427230cda
Simkin, Lyndon
e2424e42-6230-4f87-a509-8eb542a4ff80
Nguyen, Bang
9a22b358-9ee4-44b7-8147-87e742ca7ff1

Japutra, Arnold, Ekinci, Yuksel, Simkin, Lyndon and Nguyen, Bang (2018) The role of ideal self-congruence and brand attachment in consumers’ negative behaviour: compulsive buying and external trash-talking. European Journal of Marketing, 52 (3-4), 683-701. (doi:10.1108/EJM-06-2016-0318).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate the role of ideal self-congruence in instigating two types of negative consumer behaviours – compulsive buying and external trash-talking – and the mediating role of brand attachment on these relationships. Design/methodology/approach: Two studies were designed using a structural equation modelling methodology. Study 1a was based on a mail survey of 280 respondents, whereas Study 1b was based on an electronic survey of 152 respondents. Study 1b was conducted to test the external validity of the research model. Findings: In Study 1a, ideal self-congruence affects emotional brand attachment and in turn emotional brand attachment affects compulsive buying behaviour and external trash-talking. The mediation analysis indicates that emotional brand attachment mediates the relationships. Study 1b offers support to the results of Study 1a. Practical implications: From a practical point of view, this study is useful for policymakers seeking to regulate and prevent excessive consumerism. For marketers, they should understand that brand attachment leads to compulsive buying and external trash-talking, which may provide immediate benefit for the brand or the firm. However, marketers should understand that these two negative behaviours may harm the firm image and consumers’ well-being in the long run. Social implications: Apart from practical implications, firms should consider alleviating compulsive buying, as it is harmful to society. Similarly, excessive external trash-talking may lead to physical aggression. Consumers expect firms to be socially responsible. Thus, firms should start conducting activities that promote responsible shopping and reduce external trash-talking. Originality/value: The study highlights a dark side of ideal self-congruence and brand attachment. The results suggest that ideal self-congruence with the help of emotional brand attachment predicts compulsive buying behaviour and external trash-talking. This may not only damage brand image but also the consumers’ well-being.

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More information

Published date: 29 March 2018
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited.
Keywords: Brand attachment, Compulsive buying, External trash-talking, Ideal self-congruence, Negative behaviour

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500184
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500184
ISSN: 0309-0566
PURE UUID: d642fd99-3904-42e6-970e-82052c251603
ORCID for Arnold Japutra: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0513-8792

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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2025 17:03
Last modified: 23 Apr 2025 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Arnold Japutra ORCID iD
Author: Yuksel Ekinci
Author: Lyndon Simkin
Author: Bang Nguyen

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