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Journal ArticleDOI

Shifting consumers into gear: car sharing services in urban areas

TLDR
In this paper, a large multinational survey is carried out in three European capitals: London, Madrid and Paris, using quota sampling, 2,159 licensed car drivers are recruited through the online panel of TNS Sofres.
Abstract
Recently, the sharing economy has attracted considerable attention. This emerging paradigm is driven by powerful technological forces and has the potential to change the way consumers access very important markets such as the car market. Indeed, access-based consumption may attract more participants as it enables consumers’ freedom of lifestyle and more flexible identity projects. The empirical literature has so far paid very little attention to car sharing services; when it has, it has focussed mainly on people who are already using them. The purpose of this paper is to consider the drivers behind the adoption intention of car sharing services.,A large multinational survey is carried out in three European capitals: London, Madrid and Paris. Using quota sampling, 2,159 licensed car drivers are recruited through the online panel of TNS Sofres. The sample is representative of the population of licensed car drivers in each city. The questionnaire is developed using established scales from previous research. An OLS regression analysis is performed to test our hypotheses, with a likelihood of choosing a car sharing option as the dependent variable.,The study demonstrates that knowledge, environmentalism, possession-self link and involvement with cars are important determinants of consumer behaviour in the car sharing services market. In addition, the user demographics suggest a target market of younger, predominantly male and urban customers. The empirical findings are consistent across the three capital cities, implying that providers can market their car sharing services in a similar manner.,As important determinants of consumer behaviour in the car sharing services market are underlined, several managerial implications arise from the study. Car sharing providers should promote awareness to help people not only to expand their experience with the service but also to be informed about the potential environmental benefits. Further, a stronger possession-self link in the automotive context is suggestive of a greater willingness to use car sharing systems. Managers should also take into account that it is much more difficult to engage individuals in car sharing services who are highly involved with car, than those who express very little attachment to the product. As people under 45 years old are far more likely to use these services, this generation effect is progressively moving the frontiers of the car retailing sector to a broader mobility service sector.,The foremost contribution of this paper is to demonstrate empirically how consumer intention to use car sharing is driven. To do so, the study addresses the general population of car drivers, interviewing users of the service as well as non-users.

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A Systematic Literature Review. Relationships between the Sharing Economy, Sustainability and Sustainable Development Goals

TL;DR: In this paper, a content analysis of 74 papers from the database Web of Science that consider these factors through the topics of the environment, consumer values, business characteristics and urban impact regarding sectors such as mobility and accommodation is presented.
Posted Content

Shoppers’ grocery choices in the presence of generalized eco-labelling

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify conditions in which a generalized eco-label in stores might modify consumers' purchase choices and identify conditions under which such labels might influence consumers' behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumer responses to online fashion renting: exploring the role of cultural differences

TL;DR: The authors explored consumer behavior in the context of online fashion renting by applying the theory of reasoned action (TRA) to online fashion rental services and comparing how consumers perceive online fashion rent in terms of its ecological importance and compatibility with the cultures of the USA and China.
Journal ArticleDOI

New insights in Peer-to-Peer carsharing and ridesharing participation intentions: Evidence from the “provider-user” perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, a large car owner survey in three major European capitals indicates that these participation decisions are driven by common latent preferences and, people who are more prone to become a peer provider are more likely to use the P2P shared mobility service (and vice versa).
Posted Content

Consumer Involvement: Review, Update and Links to Decision Neuroscience

TL;DR: The first session of the conference was entitled: "emerging issues in low involvement theory" as discussed by the authors, a special session involving the who's who of consumer behavior researchers of the era.
References
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Issues and opinion on structural equation modeling

TL;DR: In the past few years, the IS field has seen a substantial increase in the number of submissions and publications using structural equation modeling techniques, which has led some to describe this approach as an example of “a second generation of multivariate analysis”.
Journal ArticleDOI

You are what you can access: Sharing and collaborative consumption online

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare sharing and collaborative consumption and find that both are growing in popularity today and make an assessment of the reasons for the current growth in these practices and their implications for businesses still using traditional models of sales and ownership.
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