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Determinants of retail store network expansion via shop-in-shops

Karine Picot-Coupey (Centre for Research in Economics and Management, Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France)
Jean-Laurent Viviani (University of Rennes 1, Rennes, France)
Paul Amadieu (Departement of Business Administration, Université de Montpellier 1, Montpellier, France)

International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management

ISSN: 0959-0552

Article publication date: 25 October 2018

Issue publication date: 5 November 2018

1169

Abstract

Purpose

Why do some retail networks operate shop-in-shops along with stand-alone units while others do not? Drawing on a resource-based and intellectual capital (IC) perspective as a broad theoretical lens, the purpose of this paper is to focus on retailer-run shop-in-shops and examine the determinants of their adoption.

Design/methodology/approach

To gain a comprehensive understanding of shop-in-shop adoption by retail branded networks, a research design mixing a quantitative study (n = 170) and a qualitative study (n = 19) was adopted to test nine hypotheses regarding these determinants of the adoption of retailer-run shop-in-shops and explore in greater depth the processes whereby they actually occur.

Findings

The main findings show that intangible resources are major determinants of the choice to operate shop-in-shops while tangible resources are minor determinants. The more robust results of the analysis lie in the positive effect of own-label merchandise range, premium pricing strategy, positioning based on symbols, retail concept fast renewal and high sector specialisation on the choice to operate a shop-in-shop. The effect of financial constraints on the decision to expand via shop-in-shops is limited.

Research limitations/implications

The authors emphasise the importance of marketing-related and company-related characteristics in differentiating the likelihood of retail networks to expand via shop-in-shops. These results lend support to the relevance of a resource-based and IC perspective in explaining the propensity of retailers to develop via shop-in-shops.

Practical implications

The decision to operate shop-in-shops should depend on the extent to which intangible resources – the most important being retail positioning grounded in symbols, an own-label merchandise range, and a high retail branded network reputation – can be valued and enhanced. Expanding a retail network via shop-in-shops does not appear to be a financially constrained expansion strategy: it must be considered as a relevant first best strategy when an independent and young retail company has intangible resources to value but limited tangible resources.

Originality/value

The study contributes to channel management and retailing research in four ways. First, it precisely delineates the specific characteristics of shop-in-shops. Second, it provides theoretical explanations – based on a resource and IC perspective – of determinants that influence the choice of shop-in-shops. Third, it empirically tests the influence of marketing-related and company-related characteristics when adopting shop-in-shops. Fourth, it provides insights into how adopting shop-in-shops. To the authors’ knowledge, the research is on the first to analyse theoretically and test the determinants for the choice of retailer-run shop-in-shops.

Keywords

Citation

Picot-Coupey, K., Viviani, J.-L. and Amadieu, P. (2018), "Determinants of retail store network expansion via shop-in-shops", International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, Vol. 46 No. 10, pp. 915-943. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJRDM-08-2016-0139

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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