Benefits and pitfalls of building and buying-in: choosing chips and boards

Author(s):  
K. Chapman
Keyword(s):  
MANAJERIAL ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
MIFTACHUR ROCHMAH

This research check to regarding influence store image to store loyalty by store satisfaction in consumen shop activity in shop SHAFA moslem Gresik. Responder the checked is consumer visited and consumer buying in shop SHAFA.Intention of this research is to know influence store image to store loyalty by store satisfaction in consumen shop activity in shop SHAFA moslem Gresik. Hypothesis which is researcher formulate in this research is store image to store loyalty and store satisfaction by parsial.Analytical tool that is used to use path analysis with the help spss/.windows.v.15. The calculation result shows that three variables included in the analysis have influence significant to store loyalty by store satisfaction in consumen acitivity.This conculsion is based on the results calculation which shows the results calculated t perhitungan > t table. Results analysis path Y2 = 0,043 + 0,215X1 and Y1 = 0,111 + 0,872 X1 + 0,119 Y2 + 0,678 X1Y2. This shows that store image work partially have influence to store loyalty by store satisfaction.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Faizal Ardiyanto

This research was conducted to examine the influence of positive emotion, time availability, and money availabilty toward impulsive buying behavior both partially and simultaneously. The respondent of this research are university students who have experienced unplanned buying in several department stores at Yogyakarta City. Purposive sampling method was utilized then 102 respondents were chosen. The results indicate that positive emotion, time availability, and money avaiability positively and significantly influence impulsive buying behavior. The three independent variables as stated above, simultaneously influence impulsive buying behavior also. Finally, as the managerial implication stated, it can be concluded that understanding consumers condition related with unplanned buying is important topics in recent years, especially in department store.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hendra Hendra ◽  
Thomas Stefanus Kaihatu

This study aims to determine the effect of store (mall) environment and money availability on consumer impulse buying in the City of Tomorrow (Cito) Surabaya. This study uses a quantitative approach whose data is obtained from the results of questionnaires. The sample in this study were 389 respondents taken based on purposive sampling technique which was included in non-probability sampling techniques. The results of this study indicate that the store (mall) environment has no effect on impulse buying. Meanwhile, money availability has a positive and significant effect on consumer impulse buying in the City of Tomorrow (Cito) Surabaya.


Author(s):  
Nils Brunsson ◽  
Ingrid Gustafsson ◽  
Kristina Tamm Hallström

How can buyers know what they are buying? In many markets this is no trivial problem, particularly for ambitious, contemporary consumers who care about the way a product has been produced and its effects on health or the physical environment. Buyers have little choice but to trust sellers’ descriptions of the origins and effects of the product, which, in turn, evokes the question of how the buyers can trust the sellers. We describe how the problem of trust has justified the production of new formal organizations, such as certification organizations, accreditation organizations, meta-organizations for the accreditation organizations, and meta-meta-organizations for these meta-organizations. In order to create trust in organizations at one level, a new level of organizations has been created for monitoring the lower level. We argue that such a ‘macro-organization’ is unlikely to represent a stable solution, but has inherent tendencies for further growth.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 3982
Author(s):  
Gloria Pérez de Albéniz-Garrote ◽  
Maria Begoña Medina-Gómez ◽  
Cristina Buedo-Guirado

The purpose of this study to analyse whether compulsive buying in teenagers is related to gender and alcohol and cannabis use in a sample of 573 students aged 14–17 from secondary education schools in Burgos (Spain) (M = 15.65; SD = 1.04). Random cluster sampling was performed to select the sample. The Compulsive Buying Questionnaire was used together with two extra promts: ‘Indicate how much alcohol you consume’ and ‘Indicate how much cannabis you take’. Descriptive statistics were used in data analysis, while MANOVA was used to study gender differences in alcohol and cannabis use, compulsive buying and their interaction. The results show higher scores for female compulsive buyers than for men, higher scores for alcohol and cannabis users’ compulsive buying than for non-users, respectively, and higher scores for female users than for male users. A certain interaction was also observed between alcohol and cannabis use. A higher alcohol consumption entailed a higher score in compulsive buying, with cannabis users who did not consume alcohol obtaining the highest scores. Thus, prevention programmes should consider teenagers’ gender and the risk of taking toxic substances.


2005 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 509-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Neuner ◽  
Gerhard Raab ◽  
Lucia A. Reisch
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Majella Kilkey ◽  
Ewa Palenga-Möllenbeck

In this article we examine the processes driving the outsourcing of masculinized forms of domestic work, involving household and garden maintenance and repair, and its displacement to migrant men; a trend which we conceive as part of the broader transnationalization of care that has been highlighted in feminist scholarship. The article draws on two studies conducted in the United Kingdom and Germany, and focuses on the demand on the part of households buying in “male” domestic services. We find that households use handymen in order to alleviate a father time-bind, which is rooted in three processes. Firstly, a “Europeanization” in norms around childhood, parenting and fathering; secondly, a liberalization and flexibilization of working time regimes in both countries; and thirdly, path dependency in welfare regimes based historically on a male breadwinner model. On the basis of our findings in the United Kingdom and Germany, we conclude the paper by reflecting on whether and why we might expect the commoditization of male domestic services to be manifest in other European countries.


1993 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 321-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sunil Gupta ◽  
Joel H. Steckel

2002 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 248-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith Grint

This article considers the roots of the division between management and leadership, and suggests that the division encourages individuals and organizations to displace responsibility for problems in health services onto others. Given the significant limits to the power of leaders, the difficulty of establishing a science of leadership, and the increasing complexity facing health service management, the problems might appear insurmountable. However, drawing on lessons from the different approaches of the combatants in the infinitely greater complexity of the Second World War, it is suggested that trying to 'manage' the chaos by controlling it, or relying on 'leaders' to solve our problems, or buying in yet more consultants, are deeply problematic strategies; only mass leadership and collective responsibility are likely to solve the problems.


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