6533b7d7fe1ef96bd126796c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Consumer receptiveness to international retail expansion: a cross-cultural study of perceptions of social and economic influence of foreign retailers

Karen H. HyllegardMiguel Angel Gómez BorjaAlejandro Mollá DescalsMolly EckmanSema Sakarya

subject

MarketingEconomics and Econometricsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectDistribution management systemAdvertisingClothingMetropolitan areaDomestic marketInternationalizationWork (electrical)PerceptionCross-culturalBusinessBusiness and International ManagementMarketingmedia_common

description

Guided by the work of Samiee (1993. Journal of Business Research, 27 (2): 103–129), Sakarya, Eckman, and Hyllegard (2007. International Marketing Review, 24 (2): 208–238), and Alexander et al. (2010. International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, 38 (3): 160–172), a cross-cultural analysis was undertaken to examine consumer receptiveness to domestic market entry by foreign apparel specialty retailers. More specifically, this study explored differences in consumers' perceptions of the influence of foreign apparel specialty retailers on social, cultural, and economic development across three countries: Spain, Turkey, and the USA. Consumer receptiveness was measured as beliefs about the social and economic influence of foreign retailers and perceptions of retailers' brand characteristics and offerings. An intercept survey of 1233 apparel shoppers was conducted in major metropolitan shopping areas in all three countries. MANOVA revealed that Spanish consumers were least concerned about urban growt...

https://doi.org/10.1080/09593969.2015.1013487