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High-versus Low-Context National Cultures: Preferences for Type of Retailer and for Human Interaction

Gregory E. Osland, Bela Florenthal

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    A purpose of this research is to investigate differences between low-and high-context national cultures in retail settings. In particular, we examined cultural differences in preference for human interaction while shopping, "emotional warmth" characteristics, perception of quality service, and retail channel preferences. As businesses more frequently employ multi-channel strategies in global settings, this topic of national culture gains importance and can shed light on key factors that shape consumers' retail preferences. Our findings indicate that national cultures differ in terms of retail channel preferences, preference for human interaction, and relationships between the two. Managerial implications and future research are addressed, as well as our study's limitations

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    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalScholarship and Professional Work - Business
    StatePublished - Jan 1 2009

    Keywords

    • channels
    • emotions
    • high-and low-context
    • human interaction
    • national cultures
    • retailing
    • service quality

    Disciplines

    • Behavioral Economics
    • Business
    • Sales and Merchandising

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