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Servicescape interior design and consumers' personality impressions

Ulrich R. Orth (A&F Marketing, Christian‐Albrechts‐University Kiel, Kiel, Germany)
Frauke Heinrich (Gebr. Lembcke GmbH & Co., Schwarzenbek, Germany)
Keven Malkewitz (Department of Marketing, Western Oregon University, Salem, Oregon, USA)

Journal of Services Marketing

ISSN: 0887-6045

Article publication date: 18 May 2012

10872

Abstract

Purpose

The personality impressions evoked by service environments play a key role in attracting and retaining customers. This paper explores the interior design of service and retail environments, and links the designer perspective with the consumer perspective to assist managers in creating and managing interiors for achieving desired responses.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors propose and test a conceptual model that relates types of interior design to consumer impressions of that environment's personality. Two studies establish holistic types of interiors based on design elements and factors with a sample of professionals, and then link those types to generic impressions evoked with consumers.

Findings

Store personality relates systematically to five holistic types of interiors. Minimal‐shell interiors score high on unpleasantness, complex‐shell designs score high on enthusiasm, genuineness, and solidity, moderate‐shell interiors generate below‐average impressions of sophistication, genuineness, and solidity, low‐content interiors score high on enthusiasm and sophistication, and high‐content designs score low on enthusiasm, and high on unpleasantness.

Research limitations/implications

This research is limited to wine tasting rooms as an example category. Implications for interior design in general can be drawn from the holistic types of interiors identified and from basic relations to generic dimensions of consumer responses.

Practical implications

The findings reported in this research assist managers in more confidently using interior design for positioning and differentiating servicescapes.

Originality/value

Integrating the designer perspective with the customer perspective is a unique approach yielding taxonomy for servicescape interiors, and a holistic perspective on their links with personality impressions.

Keywords

Citation

Orth, U.R., Heinrich, F. and Malkewitz, K. (2012), "Servicescape interior design and consumers' personality impressions", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 26 No. 3, pp. 194-203. https://doi.org/10.1108/08876041211223997

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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