scholarly journals Consumer purchasing behavior: an empirical study of livestock products food

2021 ◽  
Vol 686 (1) ◽  
pp. 012011
Author(s):  
M A U Muzayyanah ◽  
S P Syahlani ◽  
N H U Dewi ◽  
E Wahyuni
2018 ◽  
pp. 1303-1327
Author(s):  
Ángel F. Agudo-Peregrina ◽  
Julián Chaparro-Peláez ◽  
Ángel Hernández-García

The purpose of this chapter is to offer a better understanding of online shoppers' behaviour, so that virtual shops may improve and adapt their product offering to effectively reach their target segments. In order to achieve this goal, a characterization of motivations to shop online is proposed as a basis for motivation-based customer segmentation. Building upon this segmentation, acceptance models—namely, an adaptation of UTAUT2 to e-commerce—have been used to look further into the purchasing behavior of each identified segment. The results from the empirical study based on responses to an online questionnaire from a sample of 718 Spanish shoppers shows seven different groups of motivations and five different customer segments, and confirms different behavioral patterns in the adoption of e-commerce for different segments of customers, with special influence of effort expectancy, facilitating conditions, and perceived risk in the online shopping behaviour of individuals.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 14-25
Author(s):  
Martin Mudrik ◽  
Martin Rigelsky ◽  
Beata Gavurova ◽  
Radovan Bačik ◽  
Richard Fedorko

The study aims to evaluate the impact of selected factors of viral campaigns on Millennials customers’ consumer behavior. This goal was achieved in two steps: in the first step, the authors determined the impact of selected attributes on purchasing behavior in general, and in the second step, they compared the impact of the selected research campaigns – the guerrilla campaign of the company 4KA and the viral campaign of the company ABSOLUT. The inputs to the analyses were obtained through answers from 360 respondents, which completed the questionnaire on a sample of Millennials customers generation (1975–2000) – social generation, which collaborate and cooperate, expect technology to simply work for adventure and passionate about values (Smith, Nichols, 2015). The survey part of the questionnaire consisted of 8 attributes (Novelty, Relevance, Aesthetics, Clarity, Humor, Emotion arousal, Surprise, Design, Purchase intention). Data were collected based on participants’ availability and their will to participate in the questionnaire and quota selection. The PLS PM method was used to assess the impact, and the bootstrap-based parametric method was used to assess the difference in the impact. One of the most important findings is that attributes such as Novelty, Relevance, Humor, and Surprise significantly affect purchasing behavior. Concerning the company 4KA, significant impacts were seen in Relevance and Surprise, and with the company ABSOLUT, significant impacts were seen in Relevance, Humor, and Surprise. When analyzing the difference in the impact, there were no significant differences between the campaigns. Acknowledgment This article is one of the partial outputs under the scientific research grant VEGA 1/0694/20, VEGA 1/0609/19.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 4627-4634
Author(s):  
Amgad S. D. Khaled ◽  
Khalid Mohammed Alomari ◽  
Khaled (M,K) Ismail AlshakeTheep ◽  
Abdullah Mohammed Mahdi Ahmed

The research provides a substantial reference from a retail point of view, considering the significance of service convenience, and it impact on customer loyalty, loyalty intention and customer’s trust with the services. The research provides a substantial reference from a retail point of view, considering the significance of service promotion, to the impact of service comfort on consumer purchasing behavior. It is a primary data research where data was collected through questionnaire and for analysis purpose AMOS and SPSS softwares have been used. A convenient sampling method was applied to select the convenience goods customers. This was done by randomly selecting respondents. The member’s examples were taken from Aurangabad, Banaras, Aligarh, Delhi and NCR locale. Different tools has been taken in this study. The study found that trust in e-retailing doesn’t affect dependability aim, which is not at all like past investigations. The study conclude that consumer loyalty doesn’t prompt the reliability aim of clients. The current examination has an extraordinary commitment in the arena of the post-buy conduct of the clients in the e-retailing division. The study is useful to e-commerce retailers who provide help in India. It helps to develop the administration and the strategies used to keep customers steady and productive.


2011 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 395-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uwe Dulleck ◽  
Franz Hackl ◽  
Bernhard Weiss ◽  
Rudolf Winter-Ebmer

Abstract We conduct an empirical study on the search and purchasing behavior of buyers on an Austrian price comparison site. On such a market a consumer typically searches for the cheapest price of a given product. Reliability and service of the supplier, however, are other important characteristics of an offer. We find robust evidence of consumer behavior that can be described as a two-stage procedure: shoppers first select a group of candidate offers based on the price only; then, in the actual buying decision consumers tradeoff a lower price with higher reliability of the retailer.


Author(s):  
Ángel F. Agudo-Peregrina ◽  
Julián Chaparro-Peláez ◽  
Ángel Hernández-García

The purpose of this chapter is to offer a better understanding of online shoppers’ behaviour, so that virtual shops may improve and adapt their product offering to effectively reach their target segments. In order to achieve this goal, a characterization of motivations to shop online is proposed as a basis for motivation-based customer segmentation. Building upon this segmentation, acceptance models—namely, an adaptation of UTAUT2 to e-commerce—have been used to look further into the purchasing behavior of each identified segment. The results from the empirical study based on responses to an online questionnaire from a sample of 718 Spanish shoppers shows seven different groups of motivations and five different customer segments, and confirms different behavioral patterns in the adoption of e-commerce for different segments of customers, with special influence of effort expectancy, facilitating conditions, and perceived risk in the online shopping behaviour of individuals.


2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (7) ◽  
pp. 1085-1099 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eunsoo Baek ◽  
Ho Jung Choo

We investigated how peer consumption of goods influences consumers' decision making. Focusing on hedonic products with emotional, experiential, but functional benefits, we conducted an empirical study with 200 Korean women aged in their 20s. Utilizing self-construal as the moderator, results indicated that when participants viewed their peers' consumption, interdependent people displayed greater purchase intention, whereas independent people exhibited nonsignificant changes in purchasing behavior. Avoidance of similarity tendency further explained why peer consumption enhanced the purchase intention of interdependents who placed a low value on avoidance of similarity, whereas the absence of peer consumption enhanced the purchase intention of independents who placed a high value on avoiding similarity. The results supported our hypothesis that, in a hedonic consumption situation, the presence of peer consumption influences consumers' purchase decisions.


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