COVID-19 involvement, shopping motives and buying behaviour : a German/South African comparison
Date
2022-04-25
Authors
Corbishley, Karen M.
Mason, Roger B.
Dobbelstein, Thomas
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Expert Journals
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate whether consumers’ personal involvement with the
COVID-19 pandemic led to hedonic or utilitarian buying motives, and how these
buying motives might encourage impulse or planned buying behaviour. Furthermore,
it examined whether these influences differed between a developed country
(Germany) and a developing country (South Africa). The methodology involved a
quantitative, descriptive, cross sectional survey, using a questionnaire based on the
literature and sent by e-mail to a quota sample from an online-accessed consumer
panel. Useable responses of 548 each from the two countries were analysed, showing
that respondents with high levels of involvement with COVID-19 also show high
levels of hedonic motivation, whereas utilitarian motivation appeared less important
and not linked to a greater involvement with COVID-19. The study also found that a
high hedonic motivation is associated with more impulsive shopping, whereas
utilitarian motivation is not. The implication is that those with a utilitarian motivation
tend towards planned shopping. Finally, the findings show that there appear to be no
significant differences between the buying behaviour of consumers in a developing
country and a developed country. This study contributed new knowledge about
consumer shopping behaviour by examining the interaction of the hedonic/utilitarian
construct and the impulsive shopping construct as components of consumer
behaviour, research that has not been done before, and especially not in a developing
country nor relative to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Description
Keywords
Pandemic, COVID-19, Consumer involvement, Hedonic, Hedonism, Utilitarian, Utilitarianism, Impulse shopping, Planned shopping
Citation
Corbishley, K.M., Dobbelstein, T. and Mason, R. B. 2022. COVID-19 involvement, shopping motives and buying behaviour : a German/South African comparison. Expert Journal of Marketing. 10(1): 43-61.