F:\ejour\ecoman\ftp\ecoman_v6_n1.prn.pdf SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 143 The Controllable Elements of the Total Retail Experience: A Study of Clothing Shoppers ________________________________________________________________ N S Terblanche Department of Business Management, University of Stellenbosch C Boshoff Department of Business Management, University of Port Elizabeth ________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT Retail clothing stores continually have to adapt to marketplace demands to remain competitive. Customer retention has become a major objective for many clothing retailers. This study combines the management of a number of the controllable personal and non-personal elements that a customer are exposed to and interacts within a retail store, as part of the shopping experience. The data analysis procedures closely followed the guidelines for scale development suggested by Churchill (1979). The empirical results suggest that there are five dimensions considered important by consumers when assessing their satisfaction with a total retail experience in a clothing store. These are: merchandise value, internal store environment, personal interaction with staff, merchandise variety and complaint handling. JEL M30 1 INTRODUCTION More sophisticated and demanding customers, domestic and foreign competition and the expanding range of choices available to customers make it increasingly difficult to retain customers over the long term. Loyal customers are increasingly regarded as the backbone of any businesses and authors such as Singh and Sirdeshmukh (2000: 150) describe loyal customers as “the emerging market-place currency for the twenty-first century”. Two of the more popular alternatives that retailers utilise to differentiate themselves from competitors are customer loyalty schemes and the delivering of exceptional service quality as part of their retailing strategy (Egan, 1999: 11; Berry, 1986; Hummel & Savitt, 1988; Reichheld & Sasser, 1990). Egan (1999: 11) has, however, cited the mixed success of loyalty schemes in retail sectors such as the fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector. He suggests that low acquis ition and switching costs in the FMCG sector impact negatively on the SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 144 success and viability of loyalty schemes. In other words, because competitors could easily copy them, loyalty schemes have yielded only limited success as a sustainable differential advantage. Service quality and especially SERVQUAL, the instrument developed to measure service quality, received a considerable amount of attention in the marketing literature published the past decade. The majority of the studies using or assessing the SERVQUAL instrument were executed in fairly "pure" services settings such as banking, airline reservations and credit card services. The typical retail store experience includes activities such as browsing, price comparisons, looking for merchandise, evaluating product variety and quality and interaction with store personnel – dimensions not captured by the SERVQUAL instrument. In other words, SERVQUAL in its original form has proved unsuitable to capture the unique blend of merchandise and service that typically make up a retailing experience. If loyalty schemes and/or other individual approaches such as the management of service quality are unsatisfactory to retain customers, it might be worthwhile to consider an approach that combines the management of a number of the personal and non-personal elements that a customer are exposed to and interact with in a retail store. This so-called shopping experience is defined by Kerin, Jain & Howard (1992) as the outcome of a customer’s interaction with a store’s physical surroundings, personal interaction with employees and customer- related policies and practices. In other words, managing the retail experience optimally presents a further alternative to retailers as a differentiating variable. 2 THE TOTAL RETAIL EXPERIENCE Total retail experience (TRE) has been defined as all the elements that encourage or inhibit consumers during their contact with a retailer (Berman & Evans, 2001: 18). TRE is influenced by two groups of components, namely non- controllable and controllable components. The non-controllable components consists of aspects such as the adequacy of street parking and the timing of deliveries from suppliers and taxes, all of which are either uncontrollable or a retailer can exert only limited control. The controllable components, on the other hand, comprise of a variety of elements that the retailer can control to a varying degree, such as the number and quality of salespeople on the shopping floor, the variety of brands on offer and the volume of stock on hand. The controllable elements of the TRE form the focus of this study. The retail literature suggests that the dimensions of the controllable components may be described as (Hummel & Savitt, 1988; Mazursky & Jacoby; 1985; Kerin, Jain & Howard, SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 145 1992; Westbrook, 1981; Baker, Grewal & Parasuraman, 1994; Sirohi, Mclaughlin & Wittink, 1998): • Service quality • Merchandise quality • Merchandise variety and assortment • Internal store environment • Product prices • Store policies The six dimensions mentioned above have been adequately described elsewhere (Terblanche & Boshoff, 2000(a): 99-117; Terblanche & Boshoff, 2000(b): 35- 41) and are briefly attended to here. Service quality consists of the five dimensions of responsiveness, reliability, empathy, assurance and tangibles and is measured with the SERVQUAL instrument. Merchandise quality refers to customers’ perception of the quality of the products on offer. Merchandise variety and assortment refer to the width and depth of the merchandise offered. Internal store environment includes all those elements that contribute towards a pleasant shopping atmosphere and include elements such as shop layout, aisles that make it easy to shop, store cleanliness, well-spaced product displays and attractive décor. Product prices as a dimension aims to establish customers’ perception that product prices represent good value. Store policies are those elements that are influenced by a shop's responsiveness to the customer's needs and include elements such as the return or exchange of purchases, shopping hours, payment options available and a system or process to deal with customer enquiries and/or complaints. Two dimensions that some want to include in TRE, namely store image and store location, are not extensively dealt with in this study. Retailing literature also suggests that a favourable store image leads to store loyalty (Hirschman, 1981). Store image, in turn, has been described as consisting of the following three general factors: merchandise-related aspects, service-related aspects and pleasantness of shopping at a store (Mazursky & Jacoby, 1985). All three of these factors are captured comprehensively in TRE (Figure 1) and that loyalty is an outcome of a positive total retail experience (TRE) rather than an underlying dimension. Although store location is normally one of the important reasons for customers frequenting a particular shop, it is not addressed in this study because in many cases, a retailer does not have complete control over store location, irrespective of whether the retailer locates in a shopping centre or a separate shopping area. For instance, over time a favourable location may deteriorate in value due to changes in road patterns, traffic congestion, the opening of competitive shops and changing demands for parking. SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 146 The theoretical structure of the TRE is illustrated in Figure 1. The shaded dimensions in Figure 1 are the ones included in the first empirical survey. These are dealt with in paragraph 5. Figure 1 Schematic presentation of the theoretical structure of the total retail experience* Total Retail Experience N o n-controllable elements Controllable elements Merchandise variety & assortment Merchandise quality Service quality Product prices Internal store environment Store policies Responsiveness Empathy Assurance Reliability Tangibles * Shaded areas indicate the controllable elements assessed in the first phase of the research 3 SOME COMMENTS ON THE TYPICAL BEHAVIOUR AND EXPECTATIONS OF CLOTHING SHOPPERS In a recent study on the importance of clothing store image attributes amongst black females, the dimensions of physical facilities, salespeople service, merchandise requests and store layout were considered as important by all the clusters of black female shoppers identified (Kleinhans, Visser, Van Aardt & Du Preez, 1998: 14-15). De Klerk, Velleman and Malherbe (1998: 15-24) also found that the appearance of and interaction with salespeople are important determinants of whether a female customer will take advice from and return for further purchases. A study amongst male consumers found the following five store attributes as most important (in order of most important to less important) to male shoppers when they shop for clothing (Torres, Summers & Belleau, 2001: 207). • Price of merchandise • Quality of merchandise SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 147 • Selection of merchandise • Brand carried in the store • Friendly personnel In earlier studies the quality and knowledge of sales personnel were also found to be very important store attributes for clothing shoppers (Mahoney & Sternquist, 1989: 101-11; Thorpe & Avery, 1983: 35-41). In a study of speciality store customers, Thorpe and Avery (1983) found that customers were willing to travel longer distances and pay higher prices in order to be served by knowledgeable sales personnel. Westbrook (1981: 68-85) found that the most influential components of retail satisfaction were satisfaction with stores’ sales personnel, special store sales, products/services purchased at the store, store environment and value-priced relationship offered by the store. The above- mentioned findings offer some explanation as to why middle and higher price clothing shops, in their attempts to entice shoppers to browse and spend time in the shop, use a free-flowing or boutique layout pattern because it creates a friendly atmosphere in which unplanned or impulse purchases are enhanced (Berman & Evans, 2001: 613). All of the above-mentioned attributes of clothing shops that have been found to be important to consumers, are included in or covered by the dimensions of TRE. 4 THE OBJECTIVES OF THIS STUDY The main objective of this study is to develop a multi-item instrument to measure customer satisfaction with the controllable components of the total retail experience. This article reports on the first two phases of a long-term study attending to the controllable elements of the total retail experience for shoppers and deals specifically with the findings of the second phase in respect of clothing shoppers. Based on the disconfirmation paradigm (Oliver, 1980), the first two phases of this three-phase process is to identify the dimensions of importance to consumers when assessing their satisfaction with a total retail experience. Only once these dimensions have been identified and empirically confirmed, can there be proceeded to the development of a valid and reliable instrument to measure customer satisfaction with the total retail experience at retailer or shop level. 5 METHODOLOGY AND SAMPLE OF THE FIRST PHASE The first phase of the empirical research was undertaken to assess which dimensions are of importance to retail shoppers when assessing their customer satisfaction at shop level. Based on the theory, the three dimensions of TRE SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 148 shaded in Figure 1 (service quality, merchandise quality and merchandise variety and assortment) were investigated during this first phase of the study. Because of the size of the complete TRE model and the large number of items measuring the three dimensions, as well as the distinct possibility of respondent fatigue, it was decided to include only three of the dimensions in the first empirical phase of the project. All 22 items of SERVQUAL were used to measure service quality. The merchandise quality dimension was measured with three merchandise quality items suggested by Finn & Kayandé (1997) as well as two self-generated items. Merchandise variety and assortment was measured with a self-generated five-item instrument. All items were linked to a 7-point Likert-type scale. The sampling procedure used in the first phase was a combination of judgement, convenience and random sampling. Four retail industries, namely fast food, clothing, supermarkets, and hardware stores were selected for the sample. These industries were studied because they offer a combination of both servic e and physical products and their market offer cannot be described as a “pure” service or independent of any service component. Two organisations in each industry were then selected on a convenience basis and requested to participate in the study. Individual respondents (customers) to be interviewed were selected on a random basis. Personal interviews, using a structured questionnaire, were conducted with customers of firms in these four industries on the retailer’s premises following a shopping visit. Every fourth customer leaving a shop was approached to take part in the survey. A total of 2 063 questionnaires were completed. In the scale purification process that followed, a Maximum Likelihood Exploratory Factor Analysis was conducted specifying a Direct Quartimin Oblique Rotation (Jennrich & Sampson, 1966) of the original factor matrix using the computer programme BMDP (Jennrich & Sampson, 1966). This was followed by an assessment of the internal consistency of each dimension as suggested by Churchill (1979). 6 RESULTS OF THE FIRST EMPIRICAL SURVEY Several different factor solutions were considered during the scale purification process. The most interpretable factor structure (factor loading exceeding 0.4 and no cross-loadings) to emerge, was a 3-factor solution. All the factors in the 3-factor solution had Eigen values above 1.00 and a sufficient number of items loading on them to a significant (0.40) extent (Hair, Anderson, Tatham & Black, 1998). The three factors that emerged were named personal interaction (measured by 3 assurance, 4 empathy, 2 reliability and 3 responsiveness items of SERVQUAL), physical cues (measured by 1 reliability and 2 tangibles items of SERVQUAL and 4 merchandise quality items) and variety (represented by 5 SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 149 variety items). The items that did load to a significant extent or did not demonstrate sufficient discriminant validity were deleted. The remaining 24 items were then subjected to a reliability analysis to assess the internal consistency of the instrument. All three factors, as well as the overall instrument returned Cronbach alpha coefficients above the 0.7 level suggested by Peterson (1994). The three remaining empirical factors and their associated items are listed in Table 1. The outcome of the first survey was that Figure 1 had to be re-configured slightly as shown in Figure 2 to reflect the results of the scale purification process (Table 1). Table 1 Empirical factor structure: Survey 1 Empirical dimension Items measuring the TRE dimensions Personal interaction (α = 0.937) Employees of XYZ should always be willing to help me XYZ employees should give me personal attention Employees of XYZ should provide me with prompt service Employees of XYZ should be consistently courteous XYZ should give me individual attention Employees of XYZ should never be too busy to respond to my requests When I have a problem, XYZ should shows sincere interest in solving it I should have confidence in XYZs employees Employees of XYZ should understand my specific needs Employees of XYZ should have the knowledge to answer my questions XYZ should have my best interests at heart XYZ should provide its services at the time it promises to do so Physical cues (α = 0.863) The products available at XYZ should be of good quality XYZs should offer products of good quality XYZ should be known for good quality products Materials associated with XYZs service (such as shopping bags, till slips or catalogues) should look good SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 150 Table 1 continued Empirical dimension Items measuring the TRE dimensions XYZs products should not have defects XYZs physical facilities should look good XYZ should provide error-free sales transaction records (till slips, credit card slips, accounts) Merchandise variety and assortment (α = 0.857) XYZ should offer me a satisfactory choice of products XYZ should have all the products that I want to buy XYZ should offer a wide variety of products The products of XYZ should cater for a wide range of preferences XYZ should make products available in a variety of sizes 7 THE SECOND SURVEY A second empirical survey was then conducted as suggested by Churchill (1979). The six items with the highest factor loadings that measured personal interaction were retained for the second empirical survey. Three of the items used to measure physical cues measured product quality and it was decided to retain only one of these three items as one item was enough to measure product quality. The following item was added to measure physical cues: “Products that function the way they are supposed to”. Two new items, apart from the five that were used to measure merchandise variety and assortment in the first survey, were added for the second empirical survey. These two items were: “A choice of different brand names” and “A good selection of well-known brands”. A total of sixteen items remaining from the scale purification process of phase 1 as well the three new items (in total nineteen items measuring personal interaction, physical cues and merchandise variety and assortment) were combined with items to measure the three remaining (then untested) dimensions of TRE, namely internal store environment (9 items), product prices (5 items) and store policies (7 items). Figure 2 is a schematic presentation of the dimensions of TRE that were subjected to empirical assessment during the second survey. SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 151 Figure 2 Schematic presentation of the dimensions of the TRE tested in the second phase of the study Total Retail Experience Non-controllable elements Controllable elements Merchandise variety & assortment Physical cues Personal interaction Product prices Internal store environment Store policies 8 SAMPLE AND DATA COLLECTION: SECOND SURVEY The sampling procedure used in the second survey was a combination of convenience and random sampling. Respondents were visitors to two regional shopping centres. Individual respondents (visitors) to be interviewed were selected on a simple random basis. Personal interviews, using a structured questionnaire, were conducted with visitors to the shopping centre after they had finished their shopping. The interviews were conducted over a period of two days to include all the different types of visitors that usually frequent these shopping centres. Respondents were asked to rate the importance of the various components of TRE on a 7-point scale where a 7 meant that the aspect under consideration is “extremely important” and a 1 meant that it is “not important”. A total of 1307 questionnaires were completed. 9 EMPIRICAL RESULTS: SECOND SURVEY The second survey data analysis procedures again closely followed the guidelines for scale development suggested by Churchill (1979). To assess the discriminant validity of the instrument a Maximum Likelihood Exploratory Factor Analysis was again conducted specifying a Direct Quartimin Oblique Rotation (Jennrich & Sampson, 1966) of the original factor matrix. Although it was expected that a six-factor solution would emerge (in line with Figure 2) several different factor solutions were considered. The most interpretable factor structure (factor loading exceeding 0.4 and no cross- loadings) to emerge, was a 5-factor solution (Table 2). Four of the five factors in SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 152 Table 2 had Eigen values above 1,00 and a sufficient number of items loading on them to a significant (0.40) extent (Hair, Anderson, Tatham & Black, 1998). Two of the three factors retained from the first survey (personal interaction and product variety and assortment) remained stable during the second survey. Of the “new” dimensions added for the second survey internal store environment and store policies emerged as separate factors as expected. Some of the items expected to measure physical and product prices, however, loaded on a common factor that was labeled merchandise value (Table 2) whilst the internal store environment items that remained, all measured complaint handling and the dimension was subsequently called complaint handling. Table 2 Rotated factor loadings Factor 1 Factor 2 Factor 3 Factor 4 Factor 5 Items Merchan- dise variety Merchan- dise value Personal interaction Complaint handling Internal store environment VAR7 0.742 0.036 0.019 -0.040 0.012 VAR3 0.701 -0.063 0.057 -0.102 -0.005 VAR6 0.682 0.109 -0.043 0.094 -0.040 VAR4 0.595 0.133 0.007 0.045 -0.045 VAR5 0.564 0.054 0.026 0.133 0.026 ENV8 0.523 -0.121 0.026 0.073 0.202 PHYS1 -0.079 0.631 0.026 0.021 0.010 PRICE1 0.013 0.585 0.074 -0.018 0.056 PHYS2 0.038 0.546 0.042 0.080 0.086 PRICE2 0.139 0.532 0.039 0.175 -0.035 VAR1 0.149 0.484 -0.006 -0.124 0.172 PHYS3 0.025 0.470 -0.014 0.182 -0.019 PRICE3 0.172 0.463 0.173 0.181 -0.118 PERS3 0.100 -0.173 0.663 -0.002 0.027 PERS2 -0.105 0.201 0.636 -0.014 0.015 PERS4 0.089 0.004 0.583 0.139 0.023 PERS6 0.140 -0.021 0.523 0.272 -0.011 PERS1 0.006 0.156 0.440 -0.070 0.037 PERS5 -0.031 0.018 0.423 0.288 0.119 POL6 0.033 0.021 0.040 0.731 0.097 POL7 0.064 0.070 0.087 0.660 0.053 POL5 0.036 0.129 0.044 0.620 -0.006 ENV1 -0.032 0.099 0.042 0.037 0.773 ENV7 0.250 0.012 0.091 0.224 0.400 Eigen- values 8.18 2.03 1.60 1.21 0.96 Cronbach Alpha 0.83 0.81 0.81 0.82 0.65 SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 153 9.1 Reliability assessment The assessment of the proposed instrument’s discriminant validity by means of an exploratory factor analysis was followed by an assessment of the internal consistency of each dimension as suggested by Churchill (1979). As indicated at the bottom of Table 2, four of the five factors/dimensions returned Cronbach Alpha values above the customary cut-off of 0.7 (Peterson, 1994). The Cronbach Alpha value for the whole instrument was 0.914 9.2 Convergent validity Any measuring instrument should be both reliable and valid (Churchill, 1979). A variety of different types of validity should be considered before any claims of validity can be made (Tull & Hawkins, 1993). To test the convergent validity of the TRE instrument the total TRE score (mean 151.45, SD18.43) was correlated with scores that was expected to measure perceptions of adequacy of parking facilities (PARK), satisfaction with the special in-store promotions (SPEC) and the image of the company (IMAGE). It was expected that consumer perceptions of these three retail issues would be positively associated with satisfaction with the total retail experience (TRE). The empirical results reported in Table 3 confirm this contention. The Pearson correlation coefficients shown in Table 3 reveal a consistent pattern of significant positive correlations with the total TRE scores, namely perceptions of adequacy of parking facilities (PARK, mean 6.24, SD 1.23), satisfaction with special in-store promotions (SPEC, mean 5.33, SD 1.52) and the image of the company (IMAGE, mean 5.72, SD 1.40), confirming the convergent validity of the TRE instrument. Table 3 Correlation matrix TRE PARK SPEC IMAGE TRE 1.00000 0.0 PARK 0.43859 0.0001 1.0000 0.0 SPEC 0.50349 0.0001 0.26448 0.0001 1.00000 0.0 IMAGE 0.46983 0.0001 0.3506 0.0001 0.49265 0.0001 1.0000.0 SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 154 9.3 Construct validity To assess the construct validity of the instrument a confirmatory factor analysis was conducted using LISREL 8.30 (Jöreskog & Sörbom, 2000). The results summarised in Table 4 and Figure 3 suggest a close fit of the model to the data (χ2 = 1113.9; df = 242; RMSEA = 0.057; GFI = 0.925; AGFI = 0.907; and ECVI = 1.07). The close fit of the model to the data provides additional evidence of the construct validity of the proposed instrument for clothing shoppers. Figure 3 Empirical results of Survey 2: Clothing Total Retail Experience Non-controllable elements Controllable elements Internal store environment Merchandise value Personal interaction Complaint handling Merchandise variety Table 4 Model fit indices Chi-square 1113.9 Df 242 RMSEA 0.057 ECVI 1.07 Normed fit index (NFI) 0.901 Comparative fit index (CFI) 0.92 Standardised RMR 0.047 GFI 0.925 AGFI 0.907 PGFI 0.746 SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 155 10 FINDINGS This study attempted to develop a generic instrument that could be used to measure customer satisfaction with the controllable elements of the in-store shopping experience of clothing shoppers. The final questionnaire consists of 23 items measuring 5 dimensions of the in-store shopping experience that adequately tap the in-store retail experience of clothing shoppers, compared to customer expectations. These five dimensions are merchandise value, internal store environment, personal interaction with staff, merchandise variety and complaint handling. Clothing retailers who whish to enhance the customer satisfaction of their shoppers will have to perform at exceptional levels on these dimensions to improve their customer satisfaction ratings and to differentiate themselves from competing clothing retailers. 11 CONCLUSION This study reports on two phases of a long-term study on the controllable elements of the total retail experience. The eventual outcome of this stream of research is to develop a reliable and valid instrument to measure customer satisfaction with the controllable components of the total retail experience at store level. Closely following the guidelines for multi-item scale development suggested by Churchill (1979) and based on the result of two empirical surveys we conclude that there are five dimensions of importance to clothing shoppers when assessing their satisfaction with a total retail experience. These dimensions are merchandise value, internal store environment, personal interaction with staff, merchandise variety and complaint handling. These five dimensions and thus the total retail experience, are measured by means of 23 items (see Appendix A). The proposed instrument in its current form demonstrates high levels of reliability, discriminant validity, convergent validity and construct validity. Consistent with the guidelines suggested by Churchill (1979) the instrument in its current form needs to be subjected to a third empirical assessment to provide conclusive evidence of the its psychometric properties and construct validity in particular. 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SAJEMS NS Vol 6 (2003) No 1 158 APPENDIX A Items to measure the total retail experience of customers Merchandise variety VAROS1 A good selection of well-known brands VAROS2 A choice of different brand names VAROS3 A wide variety of products VAROS4 A variety of brand names that are available in many different sizes VAROS5 Products that cater for a wide range of preferences Merchandise value MEVAL1 Products that function the way they are supposed to MEVAL2 Reasonable prices MEVAL3 Products of good quality MEVAL4 Prices that offer value for money MEVAL5 A satisfactory choice of products MEVAL6 Products that are free from defects and flaws MEVAL7 Products at prices that represent good value Personal interaction PERSIN1 Staff that give me personal attention PERSIN2 Staff are always willing to help me PERSIN3 Staff that provide me with prompt service PERSIN4 Staff that are never too busy to assist me PERSIN5 Staff that understand my specific needs PERSIN6 Staff that are courteous Complaint handling COHAN1 An effective means of dealing with customer enquiries COHAN2 Staff that efficiently deal with customer complaints COHAN3 A fair system for the handling of complaints Internal store environment STENV1 A pleasant shopping atmosphere STENV2 A convenient shopping environment