Abstract:
This study explores how social media marketing and brand awareness influence consumer
purchase intention within Sri Lanka’s branded fashion retail sector, with consumer brand
engagement assessed as a mediating variable. Grounded in the Stimulus-Organism-Response
(S-O-R) Model, Chaffey’s RACE Framework, the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB), the
Customer-Based Brand Equity (CBBE) Model, and Aaker’s Brand Equity Model, the research
builds a robust theoretical framework for understanding digital consumer behaviour. Adopting
a positivist, deductive, and quantitative mono-method approach, data were gathered from 404
digitally active consumers through structured questionnaires. Analysis using SPSS Version 30
validated construct reliability and suitability through Cronbach’s Alpha, KMO, and Bartlett’s
Test.
Correlation and regression analyses indicated significant positive associations between social
media marketing, brand awareness, and consumer purchase intention, with social media
marketing showing the greater influence. Sobel test results confirmed that consumer brand
engagement significantly mediates these relationships (z = 3.71, p = 0.00021; z = 7.22, p <
0.001). The final multiple regression model revealed that social media marketing, brand
awareness, and consumer brand engagement together accounted for 59.5% of the variance in
consumer purchase intention, with social media marketing emerging as the strongest predictor
(β = .498).
The findings highlight that emotionally and cognitively engaging consumers through
personalized and interactive social media marketing efforts substantially strengthens purchase
intentions. This study provides practical guidance for branded fashion retailers seeking to refine
their digital marketing strategies and addresses a key gap in Sri Lankan research by presenting
a predictive model grounded in established marketing and behavioural theories.