“…Both tourism (Goldsmith & Tsiotsou, ) and retailing (Sullivan, Kang, et al , ) are fully experiential products, in the sense that they can paradigmatically be explained through the combination and interdependence of both functional and emotional aspects. Nevertheless, in spite of this dual relevance, research on experiential tourists' shopping values and their connection to behavioral intentions (satisfaction and loyalty) is relatively limited and has only recently started to surface (e.g., Choi et al , , ; Sirakaya‐Turk et al , ; Zaidan, ). - It adds causality to experiential dimensions: This work tests a structural model proposing a chain of effects between experiential value dimensions, moving on from other works that consider experiential value dimensions to have equally direct effects on the overall perception of value, customer satisfaction, and loyalty.
- It tests the relativistic and subjective nature of value perceptions (Holbrook, ; Li et al, ) as an additional measurement of the experiential approach, by building a multidimensional index for experiential tourist shopping value (ETSV index), in order to find significant differences in tourist shoppers in terms of age, gender, and nationality.
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