Assisting sustainable food consumption: The effects of quality signals stemming from consumers and stores in online and physical grocery retailing
Assisting sustainable food consumption: The effects of quality signals stemming from consumers and stores in online and physical grocery retailing
Increased fish consumption can contribute to a more sustainable food system. This paper explores how signaling affects consumer choices in fresh fish purchasing situations, both in traditional and online retail settings. We examined two different types of market signals; quality signals stemming from consumers as a social proof and authority signals coming from stores. Study 1 showed that quality signals from other consumers (product rating) had the highest importance score in an online setting when compared to traditional attributes in a conjoint experiment. Study 2 again confirmed the prominence of quality signals from consumers by extending the research over to brick and mortar retailing and top-selling items. Study 3 followed up with in-store experiments, using fresh cod fillets as the target product and fresh ground beef as a comparison. The experiments showed increased sales from both types of signaling, with an overall 41.5% increase for fish in our study.
458-471
Sigurdsson, V.
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Larsen, N.M.
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Alemu, M.H.
21a36a54-9fca-4b8b-ae60-b29a7faf03f6
Gallogly, J.K.
0e6180f1-18d0-442a-8cee-b5f7e755e15c
Menon, R.G.V.
cf91657e-cd61-4431-9e25-c6ad94ba9ee0
Fagerstrøm, A.
2e7ab829-2193-43a6-8264-c10cc63e2fb1
8 April 2020
Sigurdsson, V.
7d4995e2-b6b4-4d04-be74-1ffac6aef3ba
Larsen, N.M.
1f19fc32-7a6f-4063-9d0f-b4037f0bea65
Alemu, M.H.
21a36a54-9fca-4b8b-ae60-b29a7faf03f6
Gallogly, J.K.
0e6180f1-18d0-442a-8cee-b5f7e755e15c
Menon, R.G.V.
cf91657e-cd61-4431-9e25-c6ad94ba9ee0
Fagerstrøm, A.
2e7ab829-2193-43a6-8264-c10cc63e2fb1
Sigurdsson, V., Larsen, N.M., Alemu, M.H., Gallogly, J.K., Menon, R.G.V. and Fagerstrøm, A.
(2020)
Assisting sustainable food consumption: The effects of quality signals stemming from consumers and stores in online and physical grocery retailing.
Journal of Business Research, 112, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jbusres.2019.11.029).
Abstract
Increased fish consumption can contribute to a more sustainable food system. This paper explores how signaling affects consumer choices in fresh fish purchasing situations, both in traditional and online retail settings. We examined two different types of market signals; quality signals stemming from consumers as a social proof and authority signals coming from stores. Study 1 showed that quality signals from other consumers (product rating) had the highest importance score in an online setting when compared to traditional attributes in a conjoint experiment. Study 2 again confirmed the prominence of quality signals from consumers by extending the research over to brick and mortar retailing and top-selling items. Study 3 followed up with in-store experiments, using fresh cod fillets as the target product and fresh ground beef as a comparison. The experiments showed increased sales from both types of signaling, with an overall 41.5% increase for fish in our study.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 3 December 2019
Published date: 8 April 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495256
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495256
ISSN: 0148-2963
PURE UUID: c2414e03-222a-423f-b444-7c2e3a4ba1ab
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Date deposited: 04 Nov 2024 17:49
Last modified: 07 Dec 2024 03:16
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Contributors
Author:
V. Sigurdsson
Author:
N.M. Larsen
Author:
M.H. Alemu
Author:
J.K. Gallogly
Author:
R.G.V. Menon
Author:
A. Fagerstrøm
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