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Consumer cross-channel behaviour: is it always planned?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 10:03 authored by Isabella Maggioni, Sean Sands, Carla Ferraro, Jason PallantJason Pallant, Jessica Pallant, Lois Shedd, Dewi Tojib
Purpose: For consumers, cross-channel behaviour is increasingly prevalent. Such behaviour involves consumers actively engaging in (and deriving benefit) from one channel during a product search but switching to another channel when making a purchase. Drawing on multi-attribute utility theory, this study proposes a cross-channel behaviour typology consisting of three key aspects: channel choice behaviour, functional and economic outcomes and consumer-specific psychographic and demographic variables. Design/methodology/approach: Segmentation analysis conducted via latent class analysis (LCA) was performed on a sample of 400 US consumers collected via an online survey. Findings: Cross-channel behaviour is not always intentional. We identify a specific segment of consumers that most often engage in unplanned, rather than intentional, cross-channel switching. We find that of all shoppers that engage in cross-channel behaviour, a fifth (20%) are forced to switch channels at the point of purchase. Practical implications: Cross-channel behaviour can be mitigated by retailers via a deep understanding of the driving factors of different configurations of showrooming and webrooming. Originality/value: In contrast with existing conceptualisations, this study suggests that cross-channel behaviour often stems from consumers being “forced” by factors outside of their control, but within the retailers' control. This research presents a nuanced approach to decompose consumer cross-channel behaviour from the consumer perspective as planned, forced or opportunistic.

History

Journal

International Journal of Retail and Distribution Management

Volume

48

Issue

12

Start page

1357

End page

1375

Total pages

19

Publisher

Emerald Publishing

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© Emerald Publishing Limited

Former Identifier

2006125238

Esploro creation date

2023-09-10

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