What is it about?

Consumers want sustainability, but at what price? With growing demands for environmental and social sustainability, retailers aim to understand how consumers might react to adaptations in retail practices. This research examines consumers’ perceptions towards retailers’ environmental and social sustainability practices and the moderating effect of price in different cultural contexts. Quantitative research methodology using scenario-based experiments was employed. Two experiments were conducted using research participants from the US (a more individualist country) and Turkey (a more collectivist country) and measured one dimension of culture, individualism versus collectivism. The results reveal that high prices negatively moderate consumers’ response to retailers’ sustainability efforts. Even though there is no significant interaction between either type of sustainability and price on purchase intention, high sustainability along with a low-price strategy leads to an increase in consumers’ commitment, satisfaction, and loyalty. Furthermore, the results demonstrate that high prices have a more negative effect on consumers’ responses in a collectivist country. This study highlights the importance of price in both individualist and collectivist cultures and provides a better understanding of a neglected dimension of sustainability, social sustainability. Managers need to be aware of the increasing demand from consumers for environmentally and socially sustainable practices but need to recognize that consumers may not be willing to pay more for these products. Companies need to formulate business strategies based on low priced-sustainable products and the cultural context of the country in which they operate.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

As retailers are the first level channel to consumers, understanding how consumers' in different countries respond to retailers' sustainability and price activities is important to understanding how sustainability efforts can be increased.

Perspectives

The research illustrates that sustainability alone is not enough to sway consumers as price is a key constraint influencing consumers.

Dr Jacqueline Kilsheimer Eastman
Georgia Southern University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: The impact of retailers’ sustainability and price on consumers’ responses in different cultural contexts, The International Review of Retail Distribution and Consumer Research, May 2019, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/09593969.2019.1611619.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page