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Consumers’ reactions to variety reduction in grocery stores: a freedom of choice perspective

Purpose This paper aims to propose a framework for psychological reactance–triggered adverse effects of variety reductions in grocery product categories on shoppers’ patronage intentions. Design/methodology/approach The paper tests this framework in two field studies with European shoppers. Findings...

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Published in:European journal of marketing 2018-10, Vol.52 (9/10), p.1931-1955
Main Authors: Argouslidis, Paraskevas, Skarmeas, Dionysis, Kühn, Antonios, Mavrommatis, Alexis
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c311t-3d03ededc436e53663b0a258eb18e78c66115b0e2e31a05b9528d0623732c8ff3
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container_end_page 1955
container_issue 9/10
container_start_page 1931
container_title European journal of marketing
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creator Argouslidis, Paraskevas
Skarmeas, Dionysis
Kühn, Antonios
Mavrommatis, Alexis
description Purpose This paper aims to propose a framework for psychological reactance–triggered adverse effects of variety reductions in grocery product categories on shoppers’ patronage intentions. Design/methodology/approach The paper tests this framework in two field studies with European shoppers. Findings Participants perceived mild (let alone aggressive or conspicuous) variety reductions as a threat to their prior freedom of choice (i.e. a precondition for the occurrence of domain-specific reactance). Through lower satisfaction with the reduced variety and anger towards the grocer, this threat, in turn, fostered adverse patronage intentions. Such effects depended on product category nature (utilitarian vs hedonic) and shoppers’ intrinsic need for variety, attitude towards private-label items and general proclivity towards experiencing reactance. Research limitations/implications By applying psychological reactance theory to a variety reduction context, this paper offers new implications for assortment reduction research. Certain limitations call for future reactance theory–framed inquiry. Practical implications The findings caution against traditional grocers’ drastic variety reduction policy and highlight conditions enabling assortment rationalisation without severely affecting freedom of choice. Originality/value Drawing on notions such as “the tyranny of choice”, critics have urged traditional grocers to drastically reduce variety. However, this paper shows that shoppers perceive variety reductions as threats to their prior freedom, which traditional grocers themselves educated them to expect and enjoy.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/EJM-12-2016-0844
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subjects Cognition & reasoning
Confidence intervals
Consumer attitudes
Consumer behavior
Consumers
Cost reduction
Emotions
Grocery stores
Inventory
Market shares
Patronage
Perceptions
Product choice
Studies
Threats
title Consumers’ reactions to variety reduction in grocery stores: a freedom of choice perspective
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