1. Introduction
The use of smartphone has grown tremendously in the last decade, with the digitalized era in human society, the growth of the smartphone industry [
1], and the increase of social interactions via Internet [
2]. This phenomenon poses huge challenges in terms of social sustainability (e.g., internet addiction), environmental sustainability (pollution for production materials, energy usage), and economic sustainability (e.g., long-term market challenges). Inevitably, such trends continually worsen and, notably, they are not reciprocally harmonized. As such, there are trends to maximize immediate economic profit with little care for its long-term sustainability in terms of economic, environmental, and social impacts. This is a common global phenomenon that affects the global world community, irrespective of culture, language, latitudes, geography, religion, policy, etc. Meanwhile, the levels of analyses for such phenomena encompasses all STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and SSH (Social Sciences and Humanities) disciplines. However, one of the keystones of this global contemporary phenomenon is the interface among this technology and its users, which are responsible for its universal adoption. The psychological level of analysis is a key to better understand the behavior of smartphone users. Furthermore, there are other inputs that are important to understand consumers’ purchase driving force. For example, the motivations behind individuals’ choice and purchase intention of a specific brand among various brands of smartphone needs to be further explored on both the psychological and economic level. Therefore, acquiring deeper knowledge at the psychological level could contribute ideas and insights for developing strategies to better cope with the various negative consequences by finding new ways to harmonize social, environmental, and economic sustainability, and, consequently, to develop strategies to better cope with these negative consequences of smartphone use at the global level. Consumption purchase represents, in fact, one of the most powerful everyday behavioral areas capable of affecting, by means of the activities and lifestyles they imply, not only the economy per se, but also its societal and environmental impacts.
Purchase intention, or the customer’s tendency or willingness to buy a certain product or service in the future [
3], may positively predict the chance of purchasing. Prior studies on the predictive factors for purchase intention are varied according to various theoretical scopes and practical domains. They include, for instance, factors acting brand communication (such as social media advertising [
3,
4]); factors acting on user’s personal experiences toward the product (such as affective, cognitive, behavioral, social and sensory experiences [
5]); factors like consumers’ optimal experience (i.e., flow, [
6]) and users’ attitudes [
7], which comprise affective components, cognitive components and behavioral components. There are also factors that directly influence purchase intention, for instance, the product’s functional and symbolic value dimensions [
8]; the brand image of the product [
9]; the identity the product represents [
10] such as self-identity [
11], social identity [
12], or both self- and social identity [
13], ethnic identity [
14,
15], and cultural identity [
16]; as well as brand personality [
17].
However, only a few prior studies have demonstrated that not only the optimal experience of flow [
18], but also identity (i.e., self-identity, social identity, brand identity) facilitates customers’ purchase intention. Moreover, previous studies also indicated that brand-related constructs (i.e., many on brand image, a few only on brand personality and brand communication) influence purchase intention. However, little prior research has studied the brand communication effect on smartphone purchase intention [
3,
19], and there has not yet been research on the brand identity and personality effects on this intention. Moreover, the application of the user experience of flow to brand-related constructs, identity, and smartphone’s purchase intention has not yet been studied. As such, the present work tries to understand smartphone purchase intention towards smartphone from a combined conceptual model embracing all of the above-mentioned important factors, aiming towards a 360° social-psychological view on potential determinants of smartphone consumption purchase: flow, brand image, brand communication, brand identity, together with brand personality, based on their theoretical background and literature support. Considering the mediating role of flow among brand features and purchase intention is also a way of valuing the social responsibility of the company and of the company–client transaction; in fact, a customer’s flow experience speaks in favor of a consumption purchase experience that is intrinsically gratifying for the user and the client. Thus, flow experience somehow gives an intrinsically socially responsible and socially sustainable feature to the consumption purchase activity.
5. Discussion
In order to understand what motivates customers to interact and choose a specific brand among various brands of smartphone, in other words, what stimulates purchase intention towards a specific smartphone brand, we proposed and tested a conceptual model that combines flow theory, brand image, brand communication, brand identity, and brand personality. Findings yielded from the 1377 Chinese participants can be discussed as follows.
First, in terms of purchase intention predictors, the present empirical results yielded from the 1377 sampling data demonstrated that, flow, as an intrinsically enjoyable and favorable experience that attracts users to frequently use their preferred brand, imposes strong predictions for future purchase intention. This finding expanded the research topic dealing with the application of flow theory into marketing and business, as it also confirmed the few already known previous findings [
6,
67,
103]. This study also found that brand image directly and positively affects consumers’ purchase intention. That is to say, consumers’ purchase intention or retention was a function of the positivity of their brand image, based on the long-term process of interaction with the smartphone brand at hand. This finding is consistent with Kala and Chaubey [
36], Ramadhan and Muthohar [
37], and Erdil [
42], thus confirming our hypothesis
H1a. Moreover, the brand identity, which was embedded in social identity theory, was also found to be predictive for purchase intention (
H3a). These two are the only direct effects.
Second, regarding flow experience predictors, interestingly, the smartphone brand image was not found to be predictive of flow experience within the present data set: The path from brand image to purchase intention through flow experience was not significant. That is to say, there is no definitive evidence that improving the smartphone’s brand image can directly enhance the consumers’ enjoyable flow experience when they use their smartphone, though previous work [
36,
37,
104] proved brand image and purchase intention relations in online marketing (as in our
H1a discussed above). Brand communication was found to be predictive for flow experience, which confirmed our hypothesis
H2b. This could be related, for example, to customers receiving customized advertising content, being then more likely to focus on the content, and thus having more probability to generate flow. In such a way, brand communication could have an impact on consumers’ enjoyable flow [
56]. The innovative finding that the brand identity predicts flow experience, which confirmed hypothesis H3b, also supports our previous work on flow-identity correlations [
23,
24,
66], and further provides evidence for questions raised for the flow-identity pathway relationship. Moreover, brand personality was also found to be predictive for flow experience (
H4b).
Third, our findings demonstrated that brand communication, although it had no direct effect on purchase intention, influenced purchase intention through perceived flow experience (
H2c). There was a similar finding for brand personality, which indirectly influenced purchase intention through flow experience (
H4c). The direct influence of brand personality on purchase intention was not obvious, and its indirect effect through flow’s mediation effect has not been much considered in previous studies. However, brand identity proved to have both a direct and indirect effect on purchase intention (
H3c). All these findings were new and thus they contribute to innovate the areas of brand features and product, specifically related to smartphone’s purchase. Furthermore, brand identity proves to be influential via flow, and this has not yet been studied in previous work, nor within the context of the smartphone market. However, it could be interpreted that, being a parallel identity construct to both personal and place identity which is embedded in social identity theory, the link between identity and flow is coherent with our previous findings relating flow with other kinds of identity levels’ constructs [
23,
24,
66]. The effect of brand identity on purchase intention, though not yet studied insofar to our knowledge, parallels constructs’ effects like self-identity [
13], ethical identity [
14], and cultural identity [
16], which are all connected to purchase intention. In general, therefore, the present result regarding the influential role of brand identity and the flow experience it promotes is coherent with the broader idea of an identity-driven customer engagement predicting purchase intention [
10].
6. Conclusions
Results of the present study advance our knowledge of the impact of brand-related constructs on purchase intention, highlighting the key mediation played by flow experience, which has not been addressed in prior studies at all for these kind of variables within an integrated model as in the present proposal. The contribution of this research is to identify the strongest factors influencing consumers’ willingness to purchase a specific brand of smartphone based on their current experience. For this purpose, we have developed a model encompassing all major brand constructs, namely brand image, brand personality, brand identity, and brand communication, as well as flow experience, and finally purchase intention. Brand image is the basic feature directly affecting smartphone purchase intention. However, this study shows a range of brand features playing a stronger role via their promotion of an optimal experience with the product. In fact, this contribution is the first to combine major brand characteristics and flow experience together to study smartphone purchase intention, namely one of the most globally adopted products and with huge worldwide impacts in many different perspectives, including economic, social and environment sustainability. Based on the study of 1377 Chinese respondents, we empirically confirmed that over and above the brand image direct effect, flow is the crucial direct predictive factor for influencing smartphone purchase intention and that flow is predicted by all the other considered brand features, with the exception of brand image. Flow was predominantly predicted by brand identity, followed by brand communication and brand personality. These findings reveal that what mostly favors the consumers’ optimal experience with the smartphone, and the most direct predictor, is its identity: how it represents the unique self of the consumer and how it allows the consumers to identify with it. Brand identity, brand personality, and brand communication allow a positive, enjoyable, and absorbing user experience with the smartphone, and thus, via such a flow experience, they can indirectly influence smartphone purchase intention. Brand image does not possess the power of affecting the user experience in a similar way.
7. Implications
This result set is very coherent with the literature, emphasizing how the contemporary economy is more and more detached from a mere image era, and is instead more attached with a reputation and identity era, this is an era where not only appearance features are crucial, but also behavioral and pragmatic features of companies and brands [
103], as the features capable of building a company and brand reputation and to deploy its identity in relation to its stakeholders, including its customers [
105]. Our results show therefore that, within such a scenario, the consumer adoption of a pervasive product such as the smartphone is based only slightly on its appearance features, its brand image, which still has some significant direct effect, being rather much more grounded in the relationship the smartphone is capable to build with its customers. Our results, coherently with this literature, show that the way in which a smartphone brand can build a relationship with its costumers is mostly by projecting a brand identity, and secondarily by building a brand communication and by possessing a brand personality. It is thanks to these three brand features that the company brand can build a strong positive relationship among the smartphone and its consumers. The consumer engagement is realized via the promotion that those three brand constructs make of a flow experience in the smartphone user: It is only, or mostly, thanks to their promotion of such a positive engaging experience in the user. These brand constructs are capable to increase the user purchase experience and subsequently to consolidate her/his purchase intention as a smartphone brand consumer.
On a more applied level in terms of practical implication, it is possible to argue that the three brand constructs that crucially promote the user’s flow experience may rest themselves on a triangular reciprocal relation. Although this is not tested within the present contribution, it is possible to conceive those crucial three brand constructs in more dynamic terms, and this can have managerial implications if we consider them within a broader theoretical framework. In fact, if we follow Bernstein’s considerations on company communication, brand personality is composed by the unique features of a brand, distinguishing it from other features [
106]. Then a part of these features can be shared locally and globally by brand communication activities; in this way, brand communication brings out some features of the brand personality into the public realm, which is openly deployed as brand identity. According to our tested model, it is then such a brand identity which promotes the user’s flow experience, namely her/his positive engagement with the smartphone. In very practical terms, therefore, the company can strategically act by first selecting some brand personality features, then communicating them effectively, to finally share an effective brand identity that can promote a positive engaging experience for the consumer. This is the main path to trigger the consumer’s purchase intention. According to our model, a coherent brand image can independently and in parallel support this process too, though playing a weaker role in terms of the magnitude strength of the effect.
Finally, a responsible company should ask how such economic sustainability could be coupled with social and environmental sustainability. The answer is in the content of the above-mentioned brand constructs and features. First of all, the power of the content lies in the possibility to utilize brand personality features: Socially and environmentally sustainable content can be secured by selecting and highlighting those brand personality features that relate to social and environmental responsibility. For example, the way in which the company brand concretely operates by abiding to socially and environmentally responsible criteria, and how they are part of its brand personality. Secondly, brand communication must promote and diffuse the above-mentioned brand personality’s socially and environmentally sustainable contents. In this process, the approaches are also important as they can convey messages, over and above the above selected contents. The adopted communication approach must be equally socially and environmentally sustainable and avoid contradicting the message content with the message means. Thirdly, the provided content of the specifically selected brand personality and the communication content and approaches are all aligned with each other in terms of social and environmental responsibility and sustainability. When these factors are present, a coherent brand identity will then be spread and shared among the potential stakeholders, in our cases across the smartphone users. It is precisely this brand identity—filled with socially and environmentally responsible and sustainable contents deriving from the selected brand personality and conveyed by a socially and environmentally responsible and sustainable brand communication—that orients the smartphone user’s experience towards a socially and environmentally sustainable horizon while granting the necessary economic sustainability by bringing the final purchase intention. Therefore, from a proper alignment among brand personality contents, to brand communication contents and means, as well as brand identity and the flow experience, it can endow in the user the final purchase intention, granting the aimed economic sustainability target. Generally speaking, it is only if the company management is capable and willing to aim the brand features towards sustainable contents and means, that the social and environmental sustainability can be coupled with the economic sustainability.
8. Limitations and Future Research
In this study, best efforts have been undertaken to minimize limits, however, some limitations still need to be addressed for future research. First, the study was only conducted with Chinese consumers. As such, in order to overcome cultural and economic biases, it would be interesting and practical to implement it at least in other Asian countries (i.e., Japan, South Korea), and to test its validities and generalizability. Second, brand-related concepts confirmed their influence on purchase intention; however, more efforts are required to theoretically and empirically test the antecedent roles of other brand-related constructs that can also influence purchase intention, as well as their further antecedent variables. Third, flow is a multi-faceted concept, however, this study only adopted a five-item unidimensional scale of flow; thus, further studies can pay even closer attention to its multi-dimensional features (i.e., arousal, challenge, telepresence, time distortion, control, interactivity of speed) [
18], by leveraging both psychological self-report and physiological methods. Finally, further research will be welcome to better disentangle the effects of affective [
107], behavioral and cognitive variables, still together with flow, on purchase intention.