Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to provide insights for flower retailers, horticultural practitioners and marketing managers into the prioritisation of cut flower attributes by German residents.Design/methodology/approachApplying a best–worst scaling approach, this analysis identified the relative ranking of importance amongst product attributes relevant to German consumers when buying fresh cut flowers. A latent class analysis determined four flower consumer segments for further study. The study builds on a sample of 978 consumers and is consistent with the most recent German census in terms of age, gender, income and federal state.FindingsThe best-worst analysis showed that intrinsic flower attributes, in particular appearance, freshness and scent were found to be more important to German consumers than the extrinsic attributes studied, namely, price, country of origin and a certification indicating fair trade. The latent class analysis determined four consumer segments that desire either budget, luxury or ethical flowers or more information about flowers. For all identified consumer segments, appearance was the attribute of greatest importance. The segments that desired luxury or ethical flowers, as well as the segment that desires more information were interested in appearance, but also had relatively large shares of preferences dedicated to flower freshness guarantees. The preference for freshness guarantees in addition to appearance may be interpreted jointly as a desire for not only beautiful and aesthetically pleasing flowers, but for sustained beauty.Originality/valueInternationally, the study fills a research gap by exploring consumer’s relative preference for cut flower attributes. In contrast to existing studies on consumer preferences for flowers in Germany, the present study builds on a sample that was targeted in terms of age, gender, net household income and federal state to the most recent German census.

Highlights

  • German flowerFresh cut flowers are meant to beautify living and business environments and have long held sentimental value for consumers around the world

  • Cut flowers consumers serve as gifts expressing affection, thankfulness, sympathy or status (Palma et al, 2011; Rihn et al, 2011; Huang and Lin, 2015)

  • Consumer preferences for cut flower attributes have been intensively studied in the USA, resulting in appearance, price, branding, product labelling, longevity and country of origin as important product attributes (Behe et al, 1999; Yue and Behe, 2008; Rihn et al, 2014)

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Summary

Paper type Research paper

International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management Vol 46 No 6, 2018 pp. JEL Classification — M31, Q10, Q13 © Meike Rombach, Nicole Widmar, Elizabeth Byrd and Vera Bitsch. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode. The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest. This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial or not-for-profit

German flower
Material and methods
Purpose of the purchase
Least important
Other forms of qualification
Freshness guarantee
Appearance Scent Price Country of origin Certification
Share of preference
German flower consumers
Findings
Further reading
Full Text
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