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https://hdl.handle.net/10321/3957
Title: | COVID-19 involvement, shopping motives and buying behaviour : a German/South African comparison | Authors: | Corbishley, Karen M. Mason, Roger B. Dobbelstein, Thomas |
Keywords: | Pandemic;COVID-19;Consumer involvement;Hedonic;Hedonism;Utilitarian;Utilitarianism;Impulse shopping;Planned shopping | Issue Date: | 25-Apr-2022 | Publisher: | Expert Journals | Source: | Corbishley, K.M., Dobbelstein, T. and Mason, R. B. 2022. COVID-19 involvement, shopping motives and buying behaviour : a German/South African comparison. Expert Journal of Marketing. 10(1): 43-61. | Journal: | Expert Journal of Marketing; Vol. 10, Issue 1 | Abstract: | This study aimed to investigate whether consumers’ personal involvement with the COVID-19 pandemic led to hedonic or utilitarian buying motives, and how these buying motives might encourage impulse or planned buying behaviour. Furthermore, it examined whether these influences differed between a developed country (Germany) and a developing country (South Africa). The methodology involved a quantitative, descriptive, cross sectional survey, using a questionnaire based on the literature and sent by e-mail to a quota sample from an online-accessed consumer panel. Useable responses of 548 each from the two countries were analysed, showing that respondents with high levels of involvement with COVID-19 also show high levels of hedonic motivation, whereas utilitarian motivation appeared less important and not linked to a greater involvement with COVID-19. The study also found that a high hedonic motivation is associated with more impulsive shopping, whereas utilitarian motivation is not. The implication is that those with a utilitarian motivation tend towards planned shopping. Finally, the findings show that there appear to be no significant differences between the buying behaviour of consumers in a developing country and a developed country. This study contributed new knowledge about consumer shopping behaviour by examining the interaction of the hedonic/utilitarian construct and the impulsive shopping construct as components of consumer behaviour, research that has not been done before, and especially not in a developing country nor relative to the COVID-19 pandemic. |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/10321/3957 | ISSN: | 2344-6773 |
Appears in Collections: | Research Publications (Management Sciences) |
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Corbishley_Mason_Dobbelstein_2022.pdf | Article | 451.57 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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