For Review Only: Consumer Buying Behaviour A Factor of Compulsive Buying Prejudiced by Windowsill Placement
For Review Only: Consumer Buying Behaviour A Factor of Compulsive Buying Prejudiced by Windowsill Placement
For Review Only: Consumer Buying Behaviour A Factor of Compulsive Buying Prejudiced by Windowsill Placement
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Journal:
Manuscript ID:
Manuscript Type:
Draft
New Submission
Physiological/neurological bases < Theoretical Foundation, Sampling/
research design < Theoretical Foundation
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Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2177187
Page 1 of 18
Irfan Hameed
PhD Scholar & Lecturer, Iqra University
Business Administration Department, Main Campus, Karachi, Pakistan
E-mail: irfan_h144@yahoo.com
Tel: +92-333-550-30-36
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Imran Hameed
PhD, Aix Marseille Universit, France
Assistant Professor, Iqra University
Business Administration Department, Main Campus, Karachi, Pakistan
E-mail: im_hameed@hotmail.com
Tel: +92-347-511-00-80
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The research has been done without getting financial support from any one instead the authors
themselves.
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In case of any query, please feel free to contact Irfan Hameed on email id:
irfan_h144@yahoo.com.
Regards,
Irfan Hameed
PhD Scholar & Lecturer,
Business Administration Department
Iqra University, Main Campus, Karachi.
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the hypotheses. The data was collected via self administered questionnaire from
Pakistan through systematic random sampling, and the sample consisted of 500
respondents. The results of data analysis supported only the 1st hypothesis which
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INTRODUCTION
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This study is an insight into the compulsive buying pattern of individuals on the basis of
maneuvers used by marketers. The relationship between windowsill placement and the demand
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of customers have been studied with respect to different consumer product categories.
Windowsill placement has been used as independent variable and types of consumer products
have been used as dependent variables namely convenience products, shopping products, and
specialty products. Unsought products have not been used for research purpose because of its
very nature. Operational definitions of the variables have been given below:
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Convenience products are consumer products and services that customers usually buy
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frequently, immediately, and with minimal comparison and buying effort. Examples include
laundry detergent, candy, magazines, and fast food. Convenience products are usually low
priced, and marketers place them in many locations to make them readily available when
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Shopping products are less frequently purchased consumer products and services that
customers compare carefully on suitability, quality, price, and style. When buying shopping
products and services, consumers spend much time and effort in gathering information and
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making comparisons. Examples include furniture, clothing, used cars, major appliances, and
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hotel and airline services. Shopping products marketers usually distribute their products through
fewer outlets but provide deeper sales support to help customers in their comparison efforts
(Kotler, Armstrong, 2011).
Specialty products are consumer products and services with unique characteristics or brand
identification for which a significant group of buyers is willing to make a special purchase effort.
Examples include specific brands of cars, high-priced photographic equipment, designer clothes,
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Unsought products are consumer products that the consumer either does not know about or
knows about but does not normally consider buying. Most major new innovations are unsought
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until the consumer becomes aware of them through advertising. Classic examples of known but
unsought products and services are life insurance, preplanned funeral services, and blood
donations to the Red Cross. By their very nature, unsought products require a lot of advertising,
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Windowsill placement refers to the placement of the product in the shopping center also known
as shelf placement. In this study word windowsill placement denotes favorable position in the
shopping center like placing it just behind the cashier or at the entrance of the store.
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Three hypothesized statements have been made to check the relationship between dependent and
independent variable (s). Firstly the relationship of shelf placement on sales of convenience
products, secondly the relationship of shelf placement on sales of shopping products, thirdly the
relationship of shelf placement on sales of specialty products.
The impact of placement has been studied with the help of the statistical test by using Statistical
Package for Social Science (SPSS). The test used is categorical regression (Optimal scaling) to
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LITERATURE REVIEW
Consumer research on compulsive buying began with work by Faber, O'Guinn, and
Krych (1987), Faber and O'Guinn (1988, 1989), O'Guinn and Faber (1989), and Valence,
d'Astous, and Fortier (1988). Faber and O'Guinn (1988) defined compulsive consumers as
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"people who are impulsively driven to consume, cannot control this behavior, and seem to buy in
order to escape from other problems". Edwards (1992) defined compulsive buying behavior as "a
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Faber, Christenson, de Zwaan, and Mitchell (1995), compulsive consumption behaviors are
associated with low levels of self-esteem, high levels of depression, and high levels of anxiety. In
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their summary of the literature, DeSarbo and Edwards (1996) linked compulsive consumption to
a number of psychological traits, including "dependence, denial, depression, lack of impulsive
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control, low self-esteem, approval seeking, anxiety, escape coping tendencies, general
compulsiveness, materialism (envy), isolation, excitement seeking, and perfectionism" . In their
research, DeSarbo and Edwards identified two clusters of compulsive consumers. They
identified an internal compulsive buying group that they argued is driven by deep psychological
problems, their personality structure, and family upbringing. The second group ofcompulsive
consumers appeared to be driven by personal circumstances rather than such deep-seated
psychological factors. The trait of impulsiveness was significant for both groups of respondents.
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similar to looking at the interaction between person and situation. In his article, Buss also
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distinguished between two types of traits. Borrowing ideas from Allport (1961), he distinguished
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surface traits from psychological traits. He suggested that surface traits are summaries of surface
behaviors. In contrast, psychological traits exist at a deeper level and act asthe foundation for the
more specific surface traits. Allport (1961) also used the term secondary traits to describe the
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In contrast to surface traits, cardinal and central traits are proposed to exist at a deeper level
(Allport, 1961). Few in number, cardinal traits identify basic dimensions on which individuals
diverge. We define cardinal traits as the basic, underlying predispositions of individuals that
arise from genetics and their early learning history. Allport (1961) proposed that the number is
likely to be between 5 and 10. If a limited set of cardinal traits can be identified, it will provide
parsimony in developing our models of individual differences in consumer behavior. As noted by
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in the hierarchical model. Based on Buss (1989) and Allport (1961), we conceptualize central
traits as narrower in application and emerging from the interplay of cardinal traits, the culture in
which an individual lives, and the learning history of the individual. These individual difference
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dimensions are more narrowly focused than the cardinal traits, and dozens may exist.
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make employees happier, reduce employee turnover and stimulate customer purchasing. Despite
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the wide spread use of music in the marketplace, research documenting the effects of music is
limited, and the results of existing research are in conclusive regarding its effects on consumer
behavior. This is unfortunate because music is an atmospheric variable readily controlled by
management. Past decisions to use background music in the marketplace have generally been
based more on intuition or folklore rather than on strong empirical results. The purpose of this
paper is twofold: First, it critically reviews the existing literature on the subject, and second, it
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variable) and its effects upon shopping behavior. In this case, music was varied from loud too
soft in eight counter-balanced experimental sessions.
It was found that significantly less time was spent in the stores when the music was loud
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compared to when it was soft, although there was no significant difference in sales or in the
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RESEARCH METHODS
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been used for selecting the sample out of the entire population. Sampling friction have been
calculated with the help of this formula
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On average almost one thousand individuals visit each superstore in evening and the target was
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Sampling friction = 500 (100 respondents from each store * 5 stores in total) / 5000 (1000
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Hence every tenth respondent have been targeted for the purpose of data collection.
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COMPULSIVE
BUYING
Convenience Products
Shopping Products
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Specialty Products
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RESULTS
4.1
R Square
.406
Adjusted R Square
.165
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.104
.835
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ANOVA
Sum of Squares
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df
Mean Square
Sig.
2.713
.039
Regression
9.889
2.472
Residual
50.111
495
.911
Total
60.000
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Beta
Shelf_Placement
.406
.133
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Sig.
9.294
.000
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R
Square
Adjusted R
Square
.136
.864
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Correlation Coefficient (R) is 0.368 which shows that the relationship between
windowsill placement in supermarkets and compulsive buying behavior of consumers for
shopping products is weak. Moreover value of Correlation Coefficient (R) is above 0 hence the
relationship between the variables is direct. Coefficient of Determination (R^2) is 0.136 which
shows that the 13.6% model is being explained by the windowsill placement and remaining
86.4% is being explained by unknown variables (which are not taken in to account for the
purpose of this research.
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ANOVA
Sum of Squares
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Mean Square
Regression
8.137
3 2.712
Residual
51.863
4 .926
Sig.
2.929
.041
96
Total
60.000
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df
Sig.
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Shelf_Placement
Beta
Bootstrap
(1000)
Estimate of Std. Error
.368
.283
1.691
.179
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Model Summary
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Multiple R
R
Adjusted
Square Square
.466
.217
.190
R
Apparent Prediction Error
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Correlation Coefficient (R) is 0.466 which shows that the relationship between
windowsill placement in supermarkets and compulsive buying behavior of consumers for
specialty products is moderate. Moreover value of Correlation Coefficient (R) is above 0 hence
the relationship between the variables is direct. Coefficient of Determination (R^2) is
0.217which shows that the 21.7% model is being explained by the windowsill placement and
remaining 78.3% is being explained by unknown variables (which are not taken in to account for
the purpose of this research.
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ANOVA
Sum of Squares
df
Mean Square
Regression 13.027
6.513
7.9 .001
04
Residual
46.973
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.824
Sig.
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60.000
4
99
Shelf_Placement
Beta
Bootstrap
(1000)
Estimate of Std. Error
df
Sig.
.466
.556
.702
.500
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4.2
S.NO.
H1
H2
Hypothesis
SIG.
2-tailed
Empirical
Conclusion
Accept
Rejected
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buying
specialty products
5.2 Discussions:
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such
as,
electronics
from
their
original
stores.
The points we came across through our research were how the manufacturers advertise
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In order to attract more consumers to buy their products, manufacturers must put in a lot
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of effort to make their product eye catching by windowsill placement , stores should be clean
proper advertisement of products should be done so the consumer becomes aware of the product.
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