JOURNAL ARTICLE

Online and store patronage: a typology of grocery shoppers

Patricia HarrisFrancesca Dall’Olmo RileyDebra RileyChris Hand

Year: 2017 Journal:   International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management Vol: 45 (4)Pages: 419-445   Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited

Abstract

Purpose Grounded on approach/avoidance behaviour theory, the purpose of this paper is to develop a typology of grocery shoppers based on the concomitant perceived advantages and disadvantages of shopping online and in store for a single cohort of consumers who buy groceries in both channels. Design/methodology/approach A survey design was employed using a sample of 871 UK shoppers who had purchased groceries online and offline. The survey instrument contained items that measured the perceived advantages and disadvantages of grocery shopping online, and items relating to the perceived advantages and disadvantages of grocery shopping in traditional supermarkets. Items were selected from the extant literature and subjected to content and face validity checks. Cluster analysis was used to develop typologies of online and offline grocery shoppers. The inter-relation between the two typology sets was then examined. Findings The results of the research provide several insights into the characteristics, perceptions and channel patronage preferences of grocery shoppers. In particular, profiling e-grocery shoppers on the basis of their concomitant perceptions of shopping online and in store suggests that the choice of whether to shop online or in store may be driven not by the perceived advantages of one channel vs the other, but by the desire to avoid the greater disadvantages of the alternative. These perceptions differ somewhat between different consumer groups. Originality/value This study makes a noteworthy contribution to the internet and general shopping literature by providing a profile of grocery shoppers based on their concomitant and often conflicting perceived advantages and disadvantages of shopping online and their perceived advantages and disadvantages of shopping in traditional supermarkets. The use of a single cohort of consumers overcomes the bias in previous studies that employ separate cohorts of online and offline shoppers and reveal important insights into the complex perceptions and behaviours of multichannel grocery shoppers.

Keywords:
Typology Grocery shopping Advertising Originality Marketing Business Perception Online and offline Sample (material) Profiling (computer programming) Extant taxon Consumer behaviour Psychology Computer science Social psychology Sociology

Metrics

106
Cited By
13.71
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
64
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Consumer Retail Behavior Studies
Social Sciences →  Business, Management and Accounting →  Marketing
Customer Service Quality and Loyalty
Social Sciences →  Business, Management and Accounting →  Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Technology Adoption and User Behaviour
Social Sciences →  Decision Sciences →  Information Systems and Management

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Cognitive age and grocery-store patronage by elderly shoppers

Christoph TellerErnst GittenbergerPeter Schnedlitz

Journal:   Journal of Marketing Management Year: 2013 Vol: 29 (3-4)Pages: 317-337
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Grocery store patronage

Mark UnclesKathy Hammond

Journal:   The International Review of Retail Distribution and Consumer Research Year: 1995 Vol: 5 (3)Pages: 287-302
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Comparing Diet Quality Between Online and In-Store Grocery Shoppers

Milks, Andrew

Journal:   University of Ottawa - Library Year: 2024
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Grocery store patronage in Dublin

A. J. Parker

Journal:   Irish Geography Year: 2016 Vol: 9 (1)Pages: 112-114
JOURNAL ARTICLE

GROCERY STORE PATRONAGE IN DUBLIN

A. J. Parker

Journal:   Irish Geography Year: 1976 Vol: 9 (1)Pages: 112-114
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.