Abstract

This study aims to identify the distinctive market segments based on tourists’ self-concept, gain a better understanding of U.S. and Canadian tourists’ travel patterns, and provide implications that are beneficial to destination marketing organizations (DMOs). This study advances the knowledge of self-concept in the tourism context by validating its measurement and employing it as a segmentation base. This study used 2 percent of cases (N=1,012) of secondary data collected by an Ontario government agency, and a factor-cluster approach for analysis. Principal component analysis was utilized to identify specific characteristics of self-concept items and the results yielded three selves (extravert self, explorative self, and depressive self). Then, the study segmented U.S. and Canadian tourists by three self-concept factors and obtained four distinctive segments: Energetic Segment (ENT), Adventurous Segment (ADT), Conservative Segment (COT), and Escaping Segment (EST). ENT tourists are characterized as active, inquisitive and confident with a medium level of perceived value, satisfaction, and recommendation. ADT represents tourists who are older, open-minded, and optimistic with the highest level of perceived value, satisfaction, and recommendation. COT is relatively passive and had the lowest level of perceived value, satisfaction, and recommendation. EST is a group of nervous and stressful young female tourists who had a low level of perceived value and a medium degree of satisfaction and recommendation. This paper concludes with appropriate advertising and promotional strategies for the different segments.

Highlights

  • Self-concept and its related constructs, such as self-actualization, self-image, self-expression, self-construal, and the like, have been widely used to explain consumer behaviour and various marketing phenomena (Zinkhan, RESEARCH PAPERUnderstanding Canadian and US tourists: A self-concept based segmentation study.Haytko, & Ward, 1996)

  • This study identified the existence of different types of self-concepts among tourists

  • To determine the dimensions of self-concept, principal component analysis with Varimax rotation was employed in exploratory factor analysis (EFA)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Self-concept and its related constructs, such as self-actualization, self-image, self-expression, self-construal, and the like, have been widely used to explain consumer behaviour and various marketing phenomena (Zinkhan, RESEARCH PAPERUnderstanding Canadian and US tourists: A self-concept based segmentation study.Haytko, & Ward, 1996). A relationship between who we are and what we do has been proposed (Belk, 1988), indicating that consumers tend to choose products/brands which are consistent with their self-concepts (Grubb & Grathwohl, 1967). The first effort to use self-concept in consumer behaviour can be traced back to the self– concept theory (Grubb & Grathwohl, 1967), which fundamentally examined the relationship between an individual’s self-concept and the symbolic value of the goods he/she is going to buy. This work was extended by Sirgy (1982) through self-congruity, indicating that consumers tend to evaluate products/brands by matching the brand-user image with their selfconcept. The congruity between products/ brands’ image and consumers’ image was the focus of consumer behaviour research

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call