The study aims to explore the unaddressed
relationship between social capital and consumers’ underlying
behavioral intentions. The study postulates that this association is
mediated by the role of attitudes and peer influence. The research
attains evidence from a usable sample of 673 responses. The majority
consists of the young and energetic social media users of Pakistan
that utilize virtual communities as a way of life. A variance based
structural equation modeling has been applied through SmartPLS 3.
The results reveal that social capital exerts a statistically supportive
association with both attitudes and peer influence. Contrastingly, this
predictor variable shows an insignificant linkage with behavioral
intentions but this relationship is fully mediated by consumer
attitudes and peer influence. The paper enhances marketing literature
with respect to an unexplored society of Pakistan. It also provides a
lens for the contemporary advertisers, in terms of supporting their
social media campaigns with affiliative and cohesive elements. The
study also identifies a series of predictor variables that could further
be tested with attitudes, subjective norms and behavioral responses.