935 resultados para Consumer complaining behavior (CCB)
Resumo:
A adoção de marcas próprias no mix de produtos de supermercados é uma ação estratégica que alguns varejistas estão utilizando para melhorar sua competitividade no setor. No Brasil, a participação de mercado das marcas próprias ainda é pouco representativa, o que reflete a atitude dos consumidores diante desses produtos. A proposta deste trabalho foi avaliar os fatores que influenciam no comportamento do consumidor em relação aos produtos de marcas próprias de supermercados. Foi desenvolvida uma pesquisa de campo de caráter exploratório com abordagem quantitativa, por meio de questionário auto-administrado, o que possibilitou a coleta de opiniões de uma amostra de 983 clientes de supermercados. Os resultados obtidos demonstram que os respondentes não possuem uma imagem positiva dos produtos de marcas próprias, devido: à grande variação na qualidade dos produtos dentro das categorias e entre as categorias ofertadas, ao risco percebido, à ausência de comunicação efetiva sobre os produtos e à imagem de inferioridade transmitida pelos atributos das marcas próprias como embalagem, forma de exposição e política de preços. Dos fatores obtidos, pode-se concluir que a imagem da loja, a comunicação e preço, a qualidade e preço destacaram-se como os mais importantes para os respondentes e que exerceram maior influência em seu comportamento.
Resumo:
A disputa pela preferência do consumidor no cenário global gerou um quadro de crescente concorrência. O ponto-de-venda passou a destacar-se como meio de comunicação de marca após a profissionalização do varejo brasileiro, iniciada na década de 1980. Com isso, o ponto-de-venda passou a exigir pesquisas sobre produtos, sobre comportamento do consumidor e ferramentas promocionais específicas. O objetivo deste trabalho é testar a participação de materiais de merchandising no processo de compra do consumidor em supermercados. Para o desenvolvimento da pesquisa, foi escolhido o método quantitativo por meio da técnica experimental em ambiente natural, ou seja, em supermercados selecionados como Grupo Experimental e Grupo de Controle. O Grupo Experimental recebeu materiais de merchandising durante uma semana e as vendas foram comparadas com o Grupo de Controle. Na comparação entre grupos, foi registrado aumento de vendas de 27,86% no supermercado experimental em relação ao supermercado controle. Na comparação com a semana anterior ao experimento, ocorreu queda de 12,62% nas vendas do supermercado experimental. A queda no poder de compra do consumidor no período é uma das possíveis explicações para esse resultado.(AU)
Resumo:
A disputa pela preferência do consumidor no cenário global gerou um quadro de crescente concorrência. O ponto-de-venda passou a destacar-se como meio de comunicação de marca após a profissionalização do varejo brasileiro, iniciada na década de 1980. Com isso, o ponto-de-venda passou a exigir pesquisas sobre produtos, sobre comportamento do consumidor e ferramentas promocionais específicas. O objetivo deste trabalho é testar a participação de materiais de merchandising no processo de compra do consumidor em supermercados. Para o desenvolvimento da pesquisa, foi escolhido o método quantitativo por meio da técnica experimental em ambiente natural, ou seja, em supermercados selecionados como Grupo Experimental e Grupo de Controle. O Grupo Experimental recebeu materiais de merchandising durante uma semana e as vendas foram comparadas com o Grupo de Controle. Na comparação entre grupos, foi registrado aumento de vendas de 27,86% no supermercado experimental em relação ao supermercado controle. Na comparação com a semana anterior ao experimento, ocorreu queda de 12,62% nas vendas do supermercado experimental. A queda no poder de compra do consumidor no período é uma das possíveis explicações para esse resultado.(AU)
Resumo:
A disputa pela preferência do consumidor no cenário global gerou um quadro de crescente concorrência. O ponto-de-venda passou a destacar-se como meio de comunicação de marca após a profissionalização do varejo brasileiro, iniciada na década de 1980. Com isso, o ponto-de-venda passou a exigir pesquisas sobre produtos, sobre comportamento do consumidor e ferramentas promocionais específicas. O objetivo deste trabalho é testar a participação de materiais de merchandising no processo de compra do consumidor em supermercados. Para o desenvolvimento da pesquisa, foi escolhido o método quantitativo por meio da técnica experimental em ambiente natural, ou seja, em supermercados selecionados como Grupo Experimental e Grupo de Controle. O Grupo Experimental recebeu materiais de merchandising durante uma semana e as vendas foram comparadas com o Grupo de Controle. Na comparação entre grupos, foi registrado aumento de vendas de 27,86% no supermercado experimental em relação ao supermercado controle. Na comparação com a semana anterior ao experimento, ocorreu queda de 12,62% nas vendas do supermercado experimental. A queda no poder de compra do consumidor no período é uma das possíveis explicações para esse resultado.(AU)
Resumo:
Shopping behavior is often exclusively studied through consumer purchases, since they are an easily measurable ouput. Still, the observation of in-store physical behavior (path, moves and actions) is crucial, as is the quantification of its impact on purchases. Using an innovative PDA tool to precisely record and time stamp consumers' moves and actions, we extend the classical Market Basket Analysis (MBA) by integrating this new information: associations between product categories are measured not only from purchases but also from consumer physical behavior. We compare results of our new method with classical MBA results and show a significant improvement.
Resumo:
The dissertation consists of three chapters related to the low-price guarantee marketing strategy and energy efficiency analysis. The low-price guarantee is a marketing strategy in which firms promise to charge consumers the lowest price among their competitors. Chapter 1 addresses the research question "Does a Low-Price Guarantee Induce Lower Prices'' by looking into the retail gasoline industry in Quebec where there was a major branded firm which started a low-price guarantee back in 1996. Chapter 2 does a consumer welfare analysis of low-price guarantees to drive police indications and offers a new explanation of the firms' incentives to adopt a low-price guarantee. Chapter 3 develops the energy performance indicators (EPIs) to measure energy efficiency of the manufacturing plants in pulp, paper and paperboard industry.
Chapter 1 revisits the traditional view that a low-price guarantee results in higher prices by facilitating collusion. Using accurate market definitions and station-level data from the retail gasoline industry in Quebec, I conducted a descriptive analysis based on stations and price zones to compare the price and sales movement before and after the guarantee was adopted. I find that, contrary to the traditional view, the stores that offered the guarantee significantly decreased their prices and increased their sales. I also build a difference-in-difference model to quantify the decrease in posted price of the stores that offered the guarantee to be 0.7 cents per liter. While this change is significant, I do not find the response in comeptitors' prices to be significant. The sales of the stores that offered the guarantee increased significantly while the competitors' sales decreased significantly. However, the significance vanishes if I use the station clustered standard errors. Comparing my observations and the predictions of different theories of modeling low-price guarantees, I conclude the empirical evidence here supports that the low-price guarantee is a simple commitment device and induces lower prices.
Chapter 2 conducts a consumer welfare analysis of low-price guarantees to address the antitrust concerns and potential regulations from the government; explains the firms' potential incentives to adopt a low-price guarantee. Using station-level data from the retail gasoline industry in Quebec, I estimated consumers' demand of gasoline by a structural model with spatial competition incorporating the low-price guarantee as a commitment device, which allows firms to pre-commit to charge the lowest price among their competitors. The counterfactual analysis under the Bertrand competition setting shows that the stores that offered the guarantee attracted a lot more consumers and decreased their posted price by 0.6 cents per liter. Although the matching stores suffered a decrease in profits from gasoline sales, they are incentivized to adopt the low-price guarantee to attract more consumers to visit the store likely increasing profits at attached convenience stores. Firms have strong incentives to adopt a low-price guarantee on the product that their consumers are most price-sensitive about, while earning a profit from the products that are not covered in the guarantee. I estimate that consumers earn about 0.3% more surplus when the low-price guarantee is in place, which suggests that the authorities should not be concerned and regulate low-price guarantees. In Appendix B, I also propose an empirical model to look into how low-price guarantees would change consumer search behavior and whether consumer search plays an important role in estimating consumer surplus accurately.
Chapter 3, joint with Gale Boyd, describes work with the pulp, paper, and paperboard (PP&PB) industry to provide a plant-level indicator of energy efficiency for facilities that produce various types of paper products in the United States. Organizations that implement strategic energy management programs undertake a set of activities that, if carried out properly, have the potential to deliver sustained energy savings. Energy performance benchmarking is a key activity of strategic energy management and one way to enable companies to set energy efficiency targets for manufacturing facilities. The opportunity to assess plant energy performance through a comparison with similar plants in its industry is a highly desirable and strategic method of benchmarking for industrial energy managers. However, access to energy performance data for conducting industry benchmarking is usually unavailable to most industrial energy managers. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), through its ENERGY STAR program, seeks to overcome this barrier through the development of manufacturing sector-based plant energy performance indicators (EPIs) that encourage U.S. industries to use energy more efficiently. In the development of the energy performance indicator tools, consideration is given to the role that performance-based indicators play in motivating change; the steps necessary for indicator development, from interacting with an industry in securing adequate data for the indicator; and actual application and use of an indicator when complete. How indicators are employed in EPA’s efforts to encourage industries to voluntarily improve their use of energy is discussed as well. The chapter describes the data and statistical methods used to construct the EPI for plants within selected segments of the pulp, paper, and paperboard industry: specifically pulp mills and integrated paper & paperboard mills. The individual equations are presented, as are the instructions for using those equations as implemented in an associated Microsoft Excel-based spreadsheet tool.
Resumo:
Research into complaints handling in the health care system has predominately focused on examining the processes that underpin the organisational systems. An understanding of the cognitive decisions made by patients that influence whether they are satisfied or dissatisfied with the care they are receiving has had limited attention thus far. This study explored the lived experiences of Queensland acute care patients who complained about some aspect of their inpatient stay. A purposive sample of sixteen participants was recruited and interviewed about their experience of making a complaint. The qualitative data gathered through the interview process was subjected to an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) approach, guided by the philosophical influences of Heidegger (1889-1976). As part of the interpretive endeavour of this study, Lazarus’ cognitive emotive model with situational challenge was drawn on to provide a contextual understanding of the emotions experienced by the study participants. Analysis of the research data, aided by Leximancer™ software, revealed a series of relational themes that supported the interpretative data analysis process undertaken. The superordinate thematic statements that emerged from the narratives via the hermeneutic process were ineffective communication, standards of care were not consistent, being treated with disrespect, information on how to complain was not clear, and perceptions of negligence. This study’s goal was to provide health services with information about complaints handling that can help them develop service improvements. The study patients articulated the need for health care system reform; they want to be listened to, to be acknowledged, to be believed, for people to take ownership if they had made a mistake, for mistakes not to occur again, and to receive an apology. For these initiatives to be fully realised, the paradigm shift must go beyond regurgitating complaints data metrics in percentages per patient contact, towards a concerted effort to evaluate what the qualitative complaints data is really saying. An opportunity to identify a more positive and proactive approach in encouraging our patients to complain when they are dissatisfied has the potential to influence improvements.
Resumo:
Deterrence strategies for deviant consumer behavior are criticised for their ‘one size fits all’ approach. In two studies, this paper examines how the size of harm and size of victim influences consumer perceptions of deviant consumer behavior. Deterrence strategies are recommended that overcome the differences in consumer perceptions of deviance.
Resumo:
Businesses in various consumer service industries have begun to unbundle their service offerings by introducing numerous fees for products and services that were previously provided as “free.” Anecdotal evidence in the media indicates that these fees cause widespread public displeasure, frustration, and outrage. This paper develops a framework of fee acceptability, negative emotions, and dysfunctional customer behavior, which is tested using data from the airline industry. Findings identify the strongest effects on betrayal in the case of baggage fees, followed by charges for comfort. Also, betrayal has a direct effect on complaining, whereas anger mediates the relationship between betrayal and negative word of mouth.
Resumo:
Depending on how they perceive risk, consumers may not always act according to their ethical beliefs, exposing a gap between beliefs and behavior. We investigate the effect of moral potency on perceived psychological risk of committing an unacceptable behavior. The results suggest that perceived risk is triggered by moral ownership.
Resumo:
Tablet computers are on the rise and are increasingly superseding stationary computers in terms of modern online shopping. This paper therefore aims on understanding how tablet and website characteristics might impact online consumer behavior. The collected data resulted from focus groups and in-depth interviews conducted with a technology affine audience. It has shown that tablets indeed may have shifted shopping behavior from utilitarian towards rather recreational attributes. Discussions also revealed high customer expectations towards visited shopping websites and prevailing deficits. Thus, harnessing the concept of experiential flow is crucial. Compelling experiences are required to increase the duration of stay and consequently the likelihood of increased purchases.
Resumo:
Living in the digital era, activities that have for centuries acted one way, have now changed and entered the online world, and online grocery shopping is one of them. It is a worldwide phenomenon and is already a significant part of people’s lifestyle in several countries however, in Portugal, it is still in expansion and improvement. Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior, this study allowed to estimate how the perceived risk and shopping orientation counterbalances the convenience offered to consumers. Furthermore, it validated how usability and access to focused promotions can help speed up this adaptation in Portugal