Abstract

Retailers have always worked to establish close relationships with customers through the retail marketing mix. Thus, the literature has a long tradition of testing the effects of various instruments on retail patronage. This meta-study synthesizes prior research into one comprehensive framework. We use 14,895 effect sizes reported by more than 239,000 shoppers from 41 countries extracted from 350 independent samples, to test the impact of 24 marketing-mix instruments on retail patronage. Specifically, we investigate the direct and indirect effects of these instruments on store satisfaction, word of mouth, patronage intention, and behavior. Product and brand management related instruments display the strongest effects on most outcome variables, whereas price, communication, service and incentive management instruments affect only selected outcomes. Distribution management turns out to be of secondary importance. However, the effectiveness of these instruments depends on the specific shopping context (food/non-food, shopping frequency, single store/agglomeration, hedonic/utilitarian), the retail environment (gross domestic product, country innovativeness, retail sales share, retail employment, Internet era), and the employed method (participant type, study design, data source). Specifically, we reveal most differences for hedonic shopping environments and developed countries. Also, the store’s advertising and atmosphere have gained importance in the Internet era, while purchase incentives, in-store orientation, and store location have lost relevance. This study contributes to a synoptic understanding of the comparable effectiveness of retail marketing instruments on retail patronage. It offers insights into the effectiveness of marketing-mix instruments and provides guidance on whether and when to invest in them. It also presents an agenda for future research on marketing-mix instruments.

Highlights

  • Publisher's copyright statement: c 2018 The Authors

  • The meta-analysis we present addresses this issue by synthesizing empirical findings from 350 independent samples and more than 239,000 shoppers, reporting 14,895 effect sizes between mix instruments and retail patronage

  • The aim was to contribute to the literature by collecting empirical findings on marketing-mix effects, examining the effectiveness of different instruments, and providing cross-context theorizing on the impact of shopping context and retail environment characteristics on retail marketing instruments

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Summary

Introduction

A full bibliographic reference is made to the original source a link is made to the metadata record in DRO the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Markus Blut* Professor of Marketing Director of the Aston Centre for Retail Insights (ACRI) Aston Business School, Aston University Aston Triangle, Birmingham, B4 7ET, UK. Christoph Teller Professor of Retailing and Marketing Department of Marketing and Retail Management Surrey Business School, University of Surrey

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