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Store disorderliness effect: shoppers' competitive behaviours in a fast-fashion retail store

Merve Coskun (Department of Management Engineering, Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey) (Department of Business Administration, University of Illinois at Springfield, Springfield, Illinois, USA)
Shipra Gupta (Department of Business Administration, University of Illinois at Springfield, Springfield, Illinois, USA)
Sebnem Burnaz (Department of Management Engineering, Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey)

International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management

ISSN: 0959-0552

Article publication date: 13 May 2020

Issue publication date: 25 June 2020

1671

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to understand the effect of store messiness and human crowding on shoppers' competitive behaviours, in-store hoarding and in-store hiding, through the mediating effect of perceived scarcity and perceived competition.

Design/methodology/approach

2 (store messiness: messy × tidy) × 2 (human crowding: high × low) between-subject factorial experiment was conducted online to manipulate retail store atmospheric factors. A total of 154 responses were collected through Amazon MTurk. The hypotheses were analysed using ANOVA and PROCESS (Hayes, 2013) procedure.

Findings

Results suggest that store messiness and human crowding within a fast-fashion store lead to perception of scarcity and competition that further affects competitive behaviours. When consumers experience store messiness, they are likely to hide merchandise in store, thus making it inaccessible for other consumers. Further, when they experience human crowding in the store, they feel that the products will be gone immediately so they have a tendency to hoard them.

Research limitations/implications

This study examined the effects of scarcity perception by studying the case of fast-fashion retailers; generalizability needs to be established across different contexts.

Practical implications

Retailers by manipulating human crowding and store messiness can create a perception of scarcity in their stores, thus enhancing sales. However, they should also pay attention to deviant behaviours such as in-store hoarding and in-store hiding as these behaviours may decrease the store sales.

Originality/value

This research contributed to the retailing literature by finding a significant relationship between human crowding, store messiness and competitive behaviours through perceived scarcity and competition.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Corrigendum: It has come to the attention of the publisher that the article: Coskun, M., Gupta, S. and Burnaz, S. (2020), “Store disorderliness effect: shoppers' competitive behaviours in a fast-fashion retail store”, International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, Vol. 48 No. 7, pp. 763-779. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJRDM-06-2019-0193, did not reference a source drawn upon: Coskun, M. (2019), “The Impact of Retail Store Environmental Cues on Shopper Behaviour”, PhD Thesis, Istanbul Technical University. https://polen.itu.edu.tr/bitstream/11527/18530/1/557686.pdf. Our guidelines make it clear that articles must be fully referenced.

Citation

Coskun, M., Gupta, S. and Burnaz, S. (2020), "Store disorderliness effect: shoppers' competitive behaviours in a fast-fashion retail store", International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, Vol. 48 No. 7, pp. 763-779. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJRDM-06-2019-0193

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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