Bgc. Dellaert et al., INVESTIGATING CONSUMERS TENDENCY TO COMBINE MULTIPLE SHOPPING PURPOSES AND DESTINATIONS, Journal of marketing research, 35(2), 1998, pp. 177-188
Because of the increasing time pressure they face, many consumers are
becoming more concerned about the efficiency of their shopping pattern
s. Retailers have recognized this trend and have improved shopping con
venience by offering greater variety in product categories and making
it easier for consumers to combine visits to multiple stores. However,
little is known about how consumers improve the efficiency of their s
hopping trips or how changes in retail supply affect the way in which
consumers combine multiple purposes and destinations. Building on prev
ious work in consumer shopping trip modeling and conjoint design theor
y, the authors introduce a choice-based conjoint approach to studying
and modeling this phenomenon. The authors illustrate the approach in a
case study that investigates the tendency of Dutch shoppers to combin
e grocery, drugstore, and clothing purchases across multiple shopping
destinations. The authors observe that the tendency of consumers to co
mbine purchases differs from category to category and depends on categ
ory availability. In general, consumers combine considerably fewer pur
chases than could be expected if their shopping trip planning was base
d purely on travel cost minimization.