Rooted in loyalty: How consumer ethnocentrism shapes consumer satisfaction with homegrown brands

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Acta Psychologica

Abstract

Grounded in Stimulus–Organism–Response and Expectation–Confirmation theories, this study examines how experiential marketing-mix cues shape consumer-based brand equity (CBBE), satisfaction, and loyalty toward home-grown non-alcoholic beverage brands, and how these effects vary with consumer ethnocentrism. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of 515 shoppers in 12 Indian hypermarkets across six cities and analyzed the data using covariance-based structural equation modelling with moderation. Results show that the combined salience of product availability, in-store accessibility, value-oriented pricing, and promotional communications significantly raises CBBE, which in turn increases satisfaction. Satisfaction then drives both brand advocacy and repurchase intention. The CBBE→satisfaction→loyalty pathway is stronger for highly ethnocentric consumers, whereas low-ethnocentric consumers are comparatively less responsive to domestic-origin cues. Conceptually, the study embeds expectation–confirmation within the S–O–R sequence and positions consumer ethnocentrism as a boundary condition linking cognitive appraisal to behavioural response, enriching accounts of nationalist consumption Managerially, domestic brands should pair transparent, value-based pricing with seamless distribution and sustained promotion to build equity and satisfaction, while global brands should co-create indigenous flavors and foreground credible sustainability innovations to engage both ethnocentric and cosmopolitan segments.

DOI

10.1016/j.actpsy.2025.105684

Publication Date

10-1-2025

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