Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah

Culture has played a significant role in all aspects of human life affecting individual behaviours and decisions making. To ascertain, understand and interpret its impact, cultural frameworks are adopted. Since the past Malaysian cultural studies has relied on Western based frameworks to explain the...

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Main Author: Abdollah, Ida Izumi
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/39521/1/39521.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/39521/
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Mara
Language: English
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spelling my.uitm.ir.395212020-12-24T05:23:30Z http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/39521/ Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah Abdollah, Ida Izumi Marketing Branding (Marketing) Culture has played a significant role in all aspects of human life affecting individual behaviours and decisions making. To ascertain, understand and interpret its impact, cultural frameworks are adopted. Since the past Malaysian cultural studies has relied on Western based frameworks to explain the Malaysian cultural related behaviors. Such frameworks are based on the assumption of population homogeneity. However, due to some unique and critical shortfall of these frameworks, it may not be a complete yardstick to assess consumer behaviour in an ethnically diverse population. In addition to this, another major shortfall in many Malaysian cultural based studies is the ethnicity scope, which has always been too narrow; limiting to Malays, Chinese and Indian ethnics only, while ignoring the other ethnics. As such the outcomes of the studies may not adequately reflect not explain the Malaysian consumer cultural behaviours. In an effort to fill the gap, this study is tailored in a local setting to explores potential cultural factors that are more reflective of the Malaysian population. Qualitative and quantitative procedures are employed with more than 1000 consumers from different ethnics participated in the study. The procedures include literature reviews, focus group interviews, expert opinions, pilot test, multivariate test of normality, Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA), Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), Pearson Correlation Analysis, Reliability Test, Validity Test and Multiple Regression Analysis. From the procedures seven farms were identified; Selfness, Religiosity, Humanity, Communion, Ethnic Identity, Moralistic and Environmentalism. The factors have been empirically tested for unidimensionality, reliability and validity, indexed a clearly good Infidel fit. The nature of the seven factors accommodates the diversity perspective of the Malaysian consumer cultural behaviors. Humanity, moralistic, religiosity and ethnic identity factors are relatively newer factor, indicates a diversion from the existing cultural frameworks. This has provided an alternative cultural platform that would be more reflective of the Malaysian populations. In the order of ranking, Ethnic identity ranked the most important followed by Environmentalism, Selfness and Religiosity factors respectively, as being determinant of brand preference. This supports the view where individuals see themselves as part of a social group, formed by laterally extended relationships rather than pursuing their own personal interests at the expense of others. Therefore, though consumers are more likely to prefer brands of which attributes match their own self-image, self-expression and lifestyle, yet at the same time emphasized the needs and tolerance towards the community and social responsibilities. In the context of marketing, the findings suggest that Malaysian consumers tend to prefer brands with compatible abstract meanings as a function of Religiosity, Selfness, Humanity, Communion, Ethnic identity, Moralistic and Environmentalism, where such associations are seen from simultaneous perspectives of preservation of individual life, society and nature. The knowledge of the determinant factors provides useful insight for marketer towards focusing and directing marketing efforts towards determinant factors for optimum outcomes. This knowledge is critical when introducing an existing brand into a culturally distinct market as well as to ensure that the correct positioning of their brands in the market. 2019 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/39521/1/39521.pdf Abdollah, Ida Izumi (2019) Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah. PhD thesis, Universiti Teknologi MARA.
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic Marketing
Branding (Marketing)
spellingShingle Marketing
Branding (Marketing)
Abdollah, Ida Izumi
Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah
description Culture has played a significant role in all aspects of human life affecting individual behaviours and decisions making. To ascertain, understand and interpret its impact, cultural frameworks are adopted. Since the past Malaysian cultural studies has relied on Western based frameworks to explain the Malaysian cultural related behaviors. Such frameworks are based on the assumption of population homogeneity. However, due to some unique and critical shortfall of these frameworks, it may not be a complete yardstick to assess consumer behaviour in an ethnically diverse population. In addition to this, another major shortfall in many Malaysian cultural based studies is the ethnicity scope, which has always been too narrow; limiting to Malays, Chinese and Indian ethnics only, while ignoring the other ethnics. As such the outcomes of the studies may not adequately reflect not explain the Malaysian consumer cultural behaviours. In an effort to fill the gap, this study is tailored in a local setting to explores potential cultural factors that are more reflective of the Malaysian population. Qualitative and quantitative procedures are employed with more than 1000 consumers from different ethnics participated in the study. The procedures include literature reviews, focus group interviews, expert opinions, pilot test, multivariate test of normality, Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA), Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), Pearson Correlation Analysis, Reliability Test, Validity Test and Multiple Regression Analysis. From the procedures seven farms were identified; Selfness, Religiosity, Humanity, Communion, Ethnic Identity, Moralistic and Environmentalism. The factors have been empirically tested for unidimensionality, reliability and validity, indexed a clearly good Infidel fit. The nature of the seven factors accommodates the diversity perspective of the Malaysian consumer cultural behaviors. Humanity, moralistic, religiosity and ethnic identity factors are relatively newer factor, indicates a diversion from the existing cultural frameworks. This has provided an alternative cultural platform that would be more reflective of the Malaysian populations. In the order of ranking, Ethnic identity ranked the most important followed by Environmentalism, Selfness and Religiosity factors respectively, as being determinant of brand preference. This supports the view where individuals see themselves as part of a social group, formed by laterally extended relationships rather than pursuing their own personal interests at the expense of others. Therefore, though consumers are more likely to prefer brands of which attributes match their own self-image, self-expression and lifestyle, yet at the same time emphasized the needs and tolerance towards the community and social responsibilities. In the context of marketing, the findings suggest that Malaysian consumers tend to prefer brands with compatible abstract meanings as a function of Religiosity, Selfness, Humanity, Communion, Ethnic identity, Moralistic and Environmentalism, where such associations are seen from simultaneous perspectives of preservation of individual life, society and nature. The knowledge of the determinant factors provides useful insight for marketer towards focusing and directing marketing efforts towards determinant factors for optimum outcomes. This knowledge is critical when introducing an existing brand into a culturally distinct market as well as to ensure that the correct positioning of their brands in the market.
format Thesis
author Abdollah, Ida Izumi
author_facet Abdollah, Ida Izumi
author_sort Abdollah, Ida Izumi
title Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah
title_short Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah
title_full Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah
title_fullStr Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah
title_full_unstemmed Validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / Ida Izumi Abdollah
title_sort validating cultural landscape in consumer brand preferences / ida izumi abdollah
publishDate 2019
url http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/39521/1/39521.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/39521/
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