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Journal ArticleDOI

The importance of consumers' perceived risk in retail strategy

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TLDR
In this paper, a means-end chain analysis is used to explore how grocery customers build a mental link between store attributes, the consequences of not having those attributes, and the motives for seeking them.
Abstract
– Gaining and sustaining a strategic competitive advantage in retailing requires knowledge of the attributes consumers value and use to discriminate between stores and why those attributes are important. Although many store image studies define discriminant attributes, few have attempted to explain either how these attributes lead to the satisfaction of personal shopping motives or how knowledge of these can be used to focus and reinforce a strategic position. The purpose of this article is to propose and examine a method to help retailers understand grocery consumers' store choice processes as a function of the linkages between store attributes, shopping motives and risk dimensions which can help them develop a more coherent and clearer positioning strategy., – Means‐end chain analysis is used to explore how grocery customers build a mental link between store attributes, the consequences of not having those attributes, and the motives for seeking them., – The findings suggest that shoppers' motives are linked to only four main risk dimensions, namely time, financial, psychosocial and physical, and we present evidence for reassessing store positioning strategies, giving more emphasis to the risks involved., – The article suggests that the prime heuristics that consumers use to compare grocery stores are the four main risk dimensions. While consumers may think heuristically (i.e. deal in general perceptions of stores rather than comparing stores in every detail), retailers act in detail, and knowledge of how store attributes are related to these risk dimensions is therefore useful to retail marketers in developing and positioning stores. The findings also confirm the usefulness of means‐end chain analysis as a methodology for assessing retail store motivations, because it allows researchers to define all the store attributes which are important to respondents, gain responses in the respondent's language, and examine the underlying motives to which tangible and intangible attributes are related. Furthermore, the constructs/elements elicited can be used to feed into Kelly's repertory grid analysis, which is useful in positioning studies for determining a company's competitive position on one of the four main positioning dimensions., – The work extends the theory of means‐end chains by highlighting the relationship between the terminal values it produces and risk dimensions. The research is relevant to retail marketers in terms of store development and personnel training, and to consumer researchers interested in risk measurement.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The concept of perceived value: a systematic review of the research:

TL;DR: A systematic review of the extensive research that has been conducted on the conceptualization of perceived value is presented in this paper, where the major conclusions of the present review are summarized in Table 1.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumer innovativeness and perceived risk: implications for high technology product adoption

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate consumer innovativeness from a hierarchical perspective and examine the simultaneous impacts of hierarchical perspective of CI and perceived risk on new product adoption, and develop an extended consumer innovation and risk model to test the hypotheses using empirical data from 746 respondents in a high technology product context.
Journal ArticleDOI

Research note: E-store image, perceived value and perceived risk

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper argue that perceived risk influences a consumer's intention to purchase and thus mitigates perceived value's role as a motivator, which prompts the consumer to purchase online.
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Disclosure Antecedents in an Online Service Context: The Role of Sensitivity of Information

TL;DR: This article used prospect theory to examine willingness to disclose in an online service context, and found that greater sensitivity of information requested produces weaker effects of customization benefits but stronger effects of information control and online privacy concern.
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Understanding the Omnichannel Customer Journey: Determinants of Interaction Choice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the overt and underlying reasons for customers' interaction choices along the omnichannel customer journey and provide additional explanations for these customer journey patterns and customers' limited motor insurance search efforts.
References
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Book

The psychology of personal constructs

TL;DR: In this paper, a reissue of George Kelly's classic work Personal Construct Psychology (PCP) is presented. And the implications of PCP for clinical practice are discussed. But the authors do not discuss the authorship of the book.

What is strategy

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Motivational determinants of risk-taking behavior.

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Measuring consumer involvement profiles

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest measuring an involvement profile, rather than a single involvement level, based on an empirical analysis of 14 product categories and find that there is more than one kind of consumer involvement, depending on the antecedents of involvement.
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Laddering theory, method, analysis, and interpretation.

TL;DR: The focus of this article is on detailing the specifics of the in-depth interviewing and analysis methodology, termed “laddering”, for uncovering means-end hierarchies defined by these key elements and their linkages or connections.
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