The Influence of Perceived Value and Personal Values on Ethical Consumption: The Case of Fairtrade Products (Conference presentation)

Ledden, L./ Boadi, T./ Kalafatis, S./ Springdal, K./ Καλαφάτης, Σ.


The purpose of this study is to examine the functional relationships among personal values, perceptions of value, satisfaction and behavioural outcomes involved in the consumption of ethical products. A theoretically-grounded model is constructed that depicts instrumental and terminal values as determinants of the get (received benefits) and give (sacrifices made) components of value, which in turn impact on satisfaction as a precursor to repurchase intention and recommendation. The behaviour of the framework is applied to Fairtrade products and tested using Partial Least Squares on data collected from 98 respondents to a mail survey carried out amongst UK consumers. Terminal but not instrumental values are found to be significant determinants of get and give, and both get and give are significant predictors of satisfaction which in turn significantly impacts on repurchase intention and recommendation.
Institution and School/Department of submitter: Σχολή Διοίκησης και Οικονομίας / Τμήμα Διοίκησης Επιχειρήσεων
Keywords: Perceived value;Personal values;Ethical Consumption;Αντιληπτή αξία;Προσωπικές αξίες;Ηθικές κατανάλωσης
Citation: International Conference on Contemporary Marketing Issues (ICCMI) 13 – 15 June 2012 Thessaloniki, Greece
Description: Άρθρο Συνεδρίου--ΑΤΕΙΘ, 2012
URI: http://195.251.240.227/jspui/handle/123456789/1261
Publisher: Alexander Technological Educational Institute (ATEI) of Thessaloniki, Department of Marketing
Bucks New University
Item type: conferenceItem
Submission Date: 2016-06-13T19:53:49Z
Item language: en
Item access scheme: free
Institution and School/Department of submitter: Σχολή Διοίκησης και Οικονομίας / Τμήμα Διοίκησης Επιχειρήσεων
Publication date: 2012-06
Bibliographic citation: Ledden, L., Boadi, T., Kalafatis, S. & Springdal, K., 2012, 'The Influence of Perceived Value and Personal Values on Ethical Consumption: The Case of Fairtrade Products', ICCMI, 13 – 15 June 2012 Thessaloniki, Greece, Alexander Technological Educational Institute (ATEI) of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, pp. 514-519.
Abstract: The purpose of this study is to examine the functional relationships among personal values, perceptions of value, satisfaction and behavioural outcomes involved in the consumption of ethical products. A theoretically-grounded model is constructed that depicts instrumental and terminal values as determinants of the get (received benefits) and give (sacrifices made) components of value, which in turn impact on satisfaction as a precursor to repurchase intention and recommendation. The behaviour of the framework is applied to Fairtrade products and tested using Partial Least Squares on data collected from 98 respondents to a mail survey carried out amongst UK consumers. Terminal but not instrumental values are found to be significant determinants of get and give, and both get and give are significant predictors of satisfaction which in turn significantly impacts on repurchase intention and recommendation.
Publisher: Alexander Technological Educational Institute (ATEI) of Thessaloniki, Department of Marketing
Bucks New University
Conference name: International Conference on Contemporary Marketing Issues (ICCMI)
Type of the conference item: full paper
Appears in Collections:ICCMI (2012)

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