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Luxury brand purchases and the extended self: a cross-cultural comparison of young female consumers

Luxury brand purchases and the extended self: a cross-cultural comparison of young female consumers
Luxury brand purchases and the extended self: a cross-cultural comparison of young female consumers
Purpose: it is generally agreed that marketing campaigns developed for western markets may not be appropriate for consumers living in eastern cultures, particularly with respect to strategies for promoting luxury brands. While consultancy reports and media commentaries show that rising levels of disposable income are driving increasing demand for luxury goods in China and Taiwan, for example, the academic literature offers very few consumer research findings clearly elucidating the different luxury purchasing behaviour of eastern and western consumers. The purpose of this paper is to compare the consumption of luxury products and luxury fashion purchasing habits in Taiwan and the UK, with particular reference to the fashion sector, focusing on a strategically important emerging market segment: young consumers of luxury brands.

Design/methodology/approach: to achieve the study’s objectives, questionnaires were administered online in each of the two countries to females aged 18-26 years, who had made more than two luxury purchases in the year preceding the survey. Employing a two-wave survey, respondents were selected via social media and personal contacts in the UK and by means of snowball sampling in Taiwan.

Findings: the study found one major point of difference among many similarities: the Taiwanese buyers scored significantly higher on indicators that they were treating luxury brands as a means of developing their self-identity and communicating their social standing: an important part of maintaining “face” in Asian cultures. These findings contain important strategic implications for luxury fashion brand managers developing marketing campaigns for the promotion of their brands in the distinctive cultures of Taiwan, Mainland China and their neighbours.

Originality/value: the study reported in this paper compares the consumption of luxury products in Taiwan and the UK, with particular reference to the fashion sector. The study contributes to existing knowledge by evaluating differences and similarities in: first, the luxury fashion purchasing behaviour of young women in Taiwan and the UK; and second, the ways in which the two sets of consumers use luxury fashion products as an extension of their selves
cross-cultural study, taiwan, luxury fashion brands, purchasing behaviour, self-image, young consumers
1757-4323
153-173
Wu, Meng-Shan
22cf1809-96a2-4076-86b3-746000b5f3bd
Nguyen, Bang
7b8e2610-577a-4f04-917b-ffe20fd620c8
Chen, Cheng-Hao Steve
fd7f1d55-ca39-4735-ae81-a2fd2aba0963
Wu, Meng-Shan
22cf1809-96a2-4076-86b3-746000b5f3bd
Nguyen, Bang
7b8e2610-577a-4f04-917b-ffe20fd620c8
Chen, Cheng-Hao Steve
fd7f1d55-ca39-4735-ae81-a2fd2aba0963

Wu, Meng-Shan, Nguyen, Bang and Chen, Cheng-Hao Steve (2015) Luxury brand purchases and the extended self: a cross-cultural comparison of young female consumers. Asia-Pacific Journal of Business Administration, 7 (3), 153-173. (doi:10.1108/APJBA-05-2015-0046).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: it is generally agreed that marketing campaigns developed for western markets may not be appropriate for consumers living in eastern cultures, particularly with respect to strategies for promoting luxury brands. While consultancy reports and media commentaries show that rising levels of disposable income are driving increasing demand for luxury goods in China and Taiwan, for example, the academic literature offers very few consumer research findings clearly elucidating the different luxury purchasing behaviour of eastern and western consumers. The purpose of this paper is to compare the consumption of luxury products and luxury fashion purchasing habits in Taiwan and the UK, with particular reference to the fashion sector, focusing on a strategically important emerging market segment: young consumers of luxury brands.

Design/methodology/approach: to achieve the study’s objectives, questionnaires were administered online in each of the two countries to females aged 18-26 years, who had made more than two luxury purchases in the year preceding the survey. Employing a two-wave survey, respondents were selected via social media and personal contacts in the UK and by means of snowball sampling in Taiwan.

Findings: the study found one major point of difference among many similarities: the Taiwanese buyers scored significantly higher on indicators that they were treating luxury brands as a means of developing their self-identity and communicating their social standing: an important part of maintaining “face” in Asian cultures. These findings contain important strategic implications for luxury fashion brand managers developing marketing campaigns for the promotion of their brands in the distinctive cultures of Taiwan, Mainland China and their neighbours.

Originality/value: the study reported in this paper compares the consumption of luxury products in Taiwan and the UK, with particular reference to the fashion sector. The study contributes to existing knowledge by evaluating differences and similarities in: first, the luxury fashion purchasing behaviour of young women in Taiwan and the UK; and second, the ways in which the two sets of consumers use luxury fashion products as an extension of their selves

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More information

Published date: 2015
Keywords: cross-cultural study, taiwan, luxury fashion brands, purchasing behaviour, self-image, young consumers
Organisations: Digital and Data Driven Marketing, Southampton Business School

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 382703
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382703
ISSN: 1757-4323
PURE UUID: 23301d5e-ab2e-45a2-a146-9810f7ea0e9b
ORCID for Cheng-Hao Steve Chen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7548-7234

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Nov 2015 11:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:50

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Contributors

Author: Meng-Shan Wu
Author: Bang Nguyen

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