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Purpose – In general, Muslims consider Islamic consumption to be a religious obligation. Previous research,
however, suggests that various socio-psychological factors may influence Islamic consumption. Failure to
comprehend the true motivations for purchasing Islamic products may lead to marketing myopia. This
research investigates the less explored motivational factors of religious compensatory consumption, namely
religious hypocrisy, religious social control and religious guilt.
Design/methodology/approach – This research relied on an online questionnaire. Purposive sampling
yielded a total of 238 Muslim respondents. The authors employed PLS-SEM analysis with the ADANCO
software to test the hypotheses.
Findings – The results reveal the following: (1) Higher religious hypocrisy leads to higher religious social
control. (2) Higher religious hypocrisy leads to higher religious guilt. (3) Higher religious social control
leads to higher religious guilt. (4) Higher religious hypocrisy leads to higher religious compensatory
consumption. (5) Higher religious social control leads to higher religious compensatory consumption.
(6) Religious social control partially mediates the relationship between religious hypocrisy and
religious compensatory consumption. (7) Higher religious guilt leads to higher religious compensatory
consumption. (8) Religious guilt partially mediates the relationship between religious hypocrisy and
religious compensatory consumption.
Research limitations/implications – First, religious compensatory consumption in this research is limited
to Muslim consumers. Future research may investigate compensatory consumption in different contexts, such
as Judaism and Christianity, which have some common religious tenets. Second, compensatory consumption is
a complex concept. The authors’ religious compensatory consumption scale only incorporated a few aspects of
compensatory consumption. Future studies may retest the authors’ measurement scale for reliability. Lastly,
the samples were dominated by the younger generation of Muslims (e.g. generation Z). Future studies may
investigate older Muslim generations.
Practical implications – First, this research illustrates how religiosity, guilt and social control may
contribute to Islamic compensatory consumption. Islamic business practitioners and retailers targeting
Muslim consumers can benefit from this research by knowing that Islamic consumption may be driven by
socio-psychological factors, such as religious hypocrisy and guilt. As a result, businesses targeting Muslim
consumers can develop marketing strategies that incorporate these religious elements while also addressing
their socio-psychological issues in order to promote Islamic products. Second, Islamic business practitioners
and retailers may consider the social environments in which Muslims are raised. The authors’ findings show
that religious social control has direct and indirect effects on Muslims’ preferences for Islamic products as a form of compensatory strategy. Islamic business practitioners may design marketing programs that revolve
around Muslim families and their Islamic values. It is in line with the previous studies that suggest the
connections between religions, local cultures and buying behaviours (Ng et al., 2020; Batra et al., 2021). In some
ways, Islamic products can be promoted to improve the well-being and cohesion of family members and
Muslim society in general. In this research, the authors argue that businesses’ failures to understand the sociopsychological motives of Islamic consumption may lead to marketing myopia.
Social implications – As previously stated, religion (i.e. Islam) may be a source of well-being and a stable
relationship among Muslims. Nevertheless, it may also become a source of negative emotions, such as guilt,
because of one’s inability to fulfil religious values, ideals or standards. According to the authors’ findings,
Islamic products can be used to compensate for a perceived lack of religiosity. At the same time, these products
may improve Muslims’ well-being. The creations of products and services that revolve around Islamic values
are expected to improve Muslims’ economic conditions and strengthen their faith and love toward Islam in the
globalized world. Moreover, Muslims, both as majority and minority groups, face increasing social pressures.
On one hand there is the (in-group) pressure to uphold Islamic values and on the other hand there is the (outgroup) pressure to preserve the local values and cultures. Indeed, living in the globalized world may require
certain compromises. This research calls for various institutions and policymakers to work out solutions that
enable all religious groups to work and live in harmony.
Originality/value – To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this research is the first to study religious
compensatory consumption quantitatively. This research operationalized variables previously discussed using
a qualitative approach, namely religious hypocrisy, social control, guilt and compensatory consumption. The
authors designed and adapted their measurement scales to fit this context, paving the way for future research in
this field. Second, this research provides new empirical evidence by examining the relationships among less
explored variables. For instance, this research has proven that several aspects of religiosity (e.g. hypocrisy, social
control and guilt) may influence compensatory consumption in the Islamic context. This research also reveals the
mediation roles of religious social control and religious guilt that were less explored in the previous studies. To
the best of their knowledge, previous studies had not addressed social control as a predictor of compensatory
consumption. Therefore, the theoretical model presented in this research and the empirical findings extend the
theory of compensatory consumption. Third, Muslims are underrepresented in the compensatory consumption
research; therefore, this research fills the population gap. Finally, this research focuses on Islamic compensatory
behaviour as the future direction of Islamic marketing. Previous Islamic marketing research had not addressed
the sensitive motives of Islamic consumption, which have now been highlighted in this research. |
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