Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products

With e-commerce, the trend that consumers are purchasing online is ever-increasing for most sectors. In particular, the fashion industry has been a large commercial activity in Singapore and this sector is set to flourish in the coming years. With e-commerce, fashion consumers are demanding more fro...

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Main Author: Shahdzah Wati Binte Adam
Other Authors: Teo Chee Chong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163832
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1638322022-12-20T04:51:53Z Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products Shahdzah Wati Binte Adam Teo Chee Chong School of Civil and Environmental Engineering TeoCC@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Maritime studies With e-commerce, the trend that consumers are purchasing online is ever-increasing for most sectors. In particular, the fashion industry has been a large commercial activity in Singapore and this sector is set to flourish in the coming years. With e-commerce, fashion consumers are demanding more from retailers in terms of service level. As a result, the last-mile distribution of consumer goods from retailers plays a vital role in ensuring a seamless and enjoyable shopping experience. Two modes are applicable within Singapore’s fashion industry: Home Delivery and Collection In-Store. As consumers are heterogenous, they showcase a preference for a certain delivery mode for their online purchases. However, research relating fashion consumer characteristics with delivery mode and its attributes is minimal. Hence, the purpose of this report is twofold. It aims to identify (1) the preferred delivery option for fashion consumers in Singapore and (2) the delivery attribute they value the most. A stated choice experiment was conducted and the report adopted Hybrid Choice Model to include fashion lifestyles as latent variables. The results show that fashion consumers prefer home deliveries over collection in-stores. Fashion consumers consider delivery fees and lead time when deciding on a delivery option. Other delivery attributes like delivery reception (delivery day and time slot), return policy, travel distance and pickup location are insignificant for Singaporean fashion consumers. Moreover, the delivery mode choice is significantly associated with latent variables “Fashion-Conscious”, “Environmentally Conscious”, “Brand Conscious”, and “Economical Oriented”. This report offers insights for fashion retailers on which aspects of their delivery operations they should focus more to enhance customer satisfaction. Bachelor of Science (Maritime Studies) 2022-12-19T07:56:35Z 2022-12-19T07:56:35Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Shahdzah Wati Binte Adam (2023). Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163832 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163832 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Maritime studies
spellingShingle Engineering::Maritime studies
Shahdzah Wati Binte Adam
Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products
description With e-commerce, the trend that consumers are purchasing online is ever-increasing for most sectors. In particular, the fashion industry has been a large commercial activity in Singapore and this sector is set to flourish in the coming years. With e-commerce, fashion consumers are demanding more from retailers in terms of service level. As a result, the last-mile distribution of consumer goods from retailers plays a vital role in ensuring a seamless and enjoyable shopping experience. Two modes are applicable within Singapore’s fashion industry: Home Delivery and Collection In-Store. As consumers are heterogenous, they showcase a preference for a certain delivery mode for their online purchases. However, research relating fashion consumer characteristics with delivery mode and its attributes is minimal. Hence, the purpose of this report is twofold. It aims to identify (1) the preferred delivery option for fashion consumers in Singapore and (2) the delivery attribute they value the most. A stated choice experiment was conducted and the report adopted Hybrid Choice Model to include fashion lifestyles as latent variables. The results show that fashion consumers prefer home deliveries over collection in-stores. Fashion consumers consider delivery fees and lead time when deciding on a delivery option. Other delivery attributes like delivery reception (delivery day and time slot), return policy, travel distance and pickup location are insignificant for Singaporean fashion consumers. Moreover, the delivery mode choice is significantly associated with latent variables “Fashion-Conscious”, “Environmentally Conscious”, “Brand Conscious”, and “Economical Oriented”. This report offers insights for fashion retailers on which aspects of their delivery operations they should focus more to enhance customer satisfaction.
author2 Teo Chee Chong
author_facet Teo Chee Chong
Shahdzah Wati Binte Adam
format Final Year Project
author Shahdzah Wati Binte Adam
author_sort Shahdzah Wati Binte Adam
title Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products
title_short Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products
title_full Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products
title_fullStr Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products
title_full_unstemmed Developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing B2C e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products
title_sort developing a taxonomy of consumer preferences for enhancing b2c e-commerce last-mile delivery: fashion products
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163832
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