Abstract
Store loyalty is an important issue for retailers since it defines one way in which consumers are attached to stores. However, store loyalty is not unidimensional and there are different ways of measuring it. After surveying the marketing literature on how to assess 'store loyalty', we compute different store loyalty indexes with French homescan database on consumer purchases (9 000 households) coupled with a store database that allows us to control for supply parameters, including store location and accessibility. We find that the store loyalty index, computed on more than 250 goods, differs greatly across chain stores. Moreover, when households increase their expenditures in a store, it does not necessarily mean that the store benefits from more loyal patronage. We also investigate the relationship between store loyalty and likelihood of buying private labels (PL). Results show that a PL expenditure increase does not translate into higher store loyalty (whatever the index studied).
Keywords
store loyalty; market power; private labels;
JEL codes
- D1: Household Behavior and Family Economics
- D3: Distribution
- L1: Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance
- Q13: Agricultural Markets and Marketing • Cooperatives • Agribusiness
Reference
Fabian Bergès, and Zohra Bouamra-Mechemache, “Measures of Store Loyalty in French Food Retailing”, Review of Agricultural and Environmental Studies, vol. 91, n. 3, 2010, pp. 261–277.
See also
Published in
Review of Agricultural and Environmental Studies, vol. 91, n. 3, 2010, pp. 261–277