Testing Behavioral Hypotheses Using an Integrated Model of Grocery Store Shopping Path and Purchase Behavior

We examine three sets of established behavioral hypotheses about consumers’ in‐store behavior using field data on grocery store shopping paths and purchases. Our results provide field evidence for the following empirical regularities. First, as consumers spend more time in the store, they become mor...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of consumer research 2009-10, Vol.36 (3), p.478-493
Hauptverfasser: Hui, Sam K., Bradlow, Eric T., Fader, Peter S.
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container_title The Journal of consumer research
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creator Hui, Sam K.
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Fader, Peter S.
description We examine three sets of established behavioral hypotheses about consumers’ in‐store behavior using field data on grocery store shopping paths and purchases. Our results provide field evidence for the following empirical regularities. First, as consumers spend more time in the store, they become more purposeful—they are less likely to spend time on exploration and more likely to shop/buy. Second, consistent with “licensing” behavior, after purchasing virtue categories, consumers are more likely to shop at locations that carry vice categories. Third, the presence of other shoppers attracts consumers toward a store zone but reduces consumers’ tendency to shop there.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Business Source Complete
subjects Behavior
Behavior modeling
Buying
Carts
Consumer behavior
Datasets
Grocery stores
Hypotheses
Parametric models
Retail stores
Shopping
Shopping trips
Social influence
Studies
Time pressure
title Testing Behavioral Hypotheses Using an Integrated Model of Grocery Store Shopping Path and Purchase Behavior
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