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Online-Offline Channel Switching Behaviour of Retail Consumers: Towards a Model of Consumer Value
Dissertation   Open access

Online-Offline Channel Switching Behaviour of Retail Consumers: Towards a Model of Consumer Value

Richard J Croome
University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland
Doctor of Philosophy, University of the Sunshine Coast
2006
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25907/00623
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Abstract

online consumer behaviour retail change Internet shopping consumer switching behaviour retail switching behaviour consumer value
This thesis explores the factors driving the online buying decision process and answers the research question: "What and why do consumers purchase online?" The objectives of this thesis in pursuit of the research question were to determine: The types of retail products consumers search for, evaluate and purchase online, the factors influencing the consumer to shop solely online and solely offline, the factors influencing the consumer to switch from the online to the offline retail channel and vice versa to make their purchase, and the development and testing of a consumer value model. The methodology adopted for this research comprised three distinct stages, a literature review, a qualitative exploration consisting of depth interviews and focus groups and finally, a quantitative survey of the Australian population. The theoretical implications of this research are: the identification of product attributes as the key driver of the consumer value creation process, the identification of product and pricing information as the key channel switching drivers during the buying decision process, the identification of the development of consumer trust as a function of product attributes and product and pricing information, confirmation that why consumer value is created is constant and how it is created is a function of the product under consideration, and the development of a model of consumer value. The practical implications of this research has identified: the likely impact of the online channel to incumbent retailers, the product types with the potential to be adapted to the online channel using current technology, and potential future product adaptations, and new product developments. The research conducted in this thesis has provided opportunities for further research in three areas; delimitations of scope, the further testing and validation of the scales and models developed and finally the methodology used.

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