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Revisiting the Big Middle: an fsQCA approach to unpack a large value market from a product specialist retailer's perspective

Nobukazu Azuma (Department of Marketing, Aoyama Gakuin University, Tokyo, Japan)
Narimasa Yokoyama (Faculty of Business Administration, Hosei University, Tokyo, Japan)
Woonho Kim (College of Commerce, Nihon University, Tokyo, Japan)

International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management

ISSN: 0959-0552

Article publication date: 9 June 2022

Issue publication date: 11 August 2022

470

Abstract

Purpose

Identifying the patterns of retail institutional change has piqued the interest of retail academics for nearly a century. The Big Middle hypothesis is one of the most recent and hybridized versions of similar theories. According to it, retailers seeking a dominant position in retailing can migrate into the Big Middle, the largest market segment, by specializing in a large market with a broad product assortment or by focusing on a specific product category and simultaneously catering for multiple segments at the same time. This study provides empirical evidence for the latter proposition by employing fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) on the case of UNIQLO, a Japanese clothing specialist retailing giant.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors devised a survey to assess (1) consumers' perceptions of UNIQLO's store attributes and (2) their perceived distance between the UNIQLO and potential competitors. The authors used fsQCA procedures to identify multiple confluences of causal conditions that led to a high level of consumer patronage for UNIQLO from various market segments.

Findings

The findings show that UNIQLO's dominance in the Big Middle stems not only from capturing a sizable homogeneous market but from aggregating multiple heterogeneous market segments with disparities of various types. This finding explains how a specialty store retailer achieves its Big Middle position.

Research limitations/implications

The findings gleaned from fsQCA are not statistically generalisable. It, therefore, is essential to ensure whether similar phenomena are observed under different spatiotemporal settings. Concerning the scope of the research, this study's finding is pertinent to only one part of the Big Middle hypothesis. Future studies are required to cover other dimensions of the Big Middle, including the generalist retailer's cases of the Big Middle.

Practical implications

The results of this study may present a valuable tool to deepen retailers' understandings on; (1) the multiple causal recipes of customer patronages to their retail offerings, (2) who the pure fans of their stores are, (3) who their principal rivals are in the mind space of the consumers, and (4) their overall market position upon aiming to realise the Big Middle. It will give retail managers an insight into how to design, implement, and churn an efficient and effective RBM.

Originality/value

The study's originality is in empirically scrutinizing and elaborating a part of the mechanism of retail change heralded by the Big Middle hypothesis.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) under grant numbers 18K01886 and 18K01893.

Citation

Azuma, N., Yokoyama, N. and Kim, W. (2022), "Revisiting the Big Middle: an fsQCA approach to unpack a large value market from a product specialist retailer's perspective", International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, Vol. 50 No. 8/9, pp. 900-921. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJRDM-10-2021-0496

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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