Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic Conferences

The growing attention placed on experiences can be regarded as a mega-trend, and has given currency to the proposition that experiences are important for consumer’s self-perception and satisfaction with a specific visit. In order to assess this assumption, this study empirically examines the applic...

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Main Authors: Ali Faizan, Hussain Kashif, Ari Ragavan Neethiahnanthan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2014-01-01
Series:SHS Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20141201009
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spelling doaj-bf88aad1cffc414aa742f415c706a1792021-03-02T10:18:21ZengEDP SciencesSHS Web of Conferences2261-24242014-01-01120100910.1051/shsconf/20141201009shsconf_4ictr2014_01009Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic ConferencesAli Faizan0Hussain Kashif1Ari Ragavan Neethiahnanthan2International Business School, Universiti Teknologi MalaysiaSchool of Hospitality, Tourism and Culinary Arts, Taylor’s UniversitySchool of Hospitality, Tourism and Culinary Arts, Taylor’s University The growing attention placed on experiences can be regarded as a mega-trend, and has given currency to the proposition that experiences are important for consumer’s self-perception and satisfaction with a specific visit. In order to assess this assumption, this study empirically examines the applicability of Pine and Gilmore’s ‘experience economy’ concept and examines the impact of its four dimensions i.e., education, escapism, esthetics, and entertainment on delegates’ satisfaction and behavioural intentions. Based on convenience sampling, 210 questionnaires are distributed to the delegates of 2 international academic conferences out of which 188 were deemed fit for further analysis 89% response rate. The results indicate that Pine and Gilmore’s model can further our understanding of the experience market. However, the findings in contrast with previous studies show that different experiential dimensions influence the delegates’ overall satisfaction in different contexts. For instance, the dimension of education has a relatively higher significant effect on the delegates’ overall satisfaction and behavioural intentions in the context of international academic conferences. The theoretical and practical implications of this study are also discussed. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20141201009
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ali Faizan
Hussain Kashif
Ari Ragavan Neethiahnanthan
spellingShingle Ali Faizan
Hussain Kashif
Ari Ragavan Neethiahnanthan
Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic Conferences
SHS Web of Conferences
author_facet Ali Faizan
Hussain Kashif
Ari Ragavan Neethiahnanthan
author_sort Ali Faizan
title Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic Conferences
title_short Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic Conferences
title_full Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic Conferences
title_fullStr Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic Conferences
title_full_unstemmed Romance of Experience, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: An Empirical Examination of International Delegates in Academic Conferences
title_sort romance of experience, satisfaction and behavioral intentions: an empirical examination of international delegates in academic conferences
publisher EDP Sciences
series SHS Web of Conferences
issn 2261-2424
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The growing attention placed on experiences can be regarded as a mega-trend, and has given currency to the proposition that experiences are important for consumer’s self-perception and satisfaction with a specific visit. In order to assess this assumption, this study empirically examines the applicability of Pine and Gilmore’s ‘experience economy’ concept and examines the impact of its four dimensions i.e., education, escapism, esthetics, and entertainment on delegates’ satisfaction and behavioural intentions. Based on convenience sampling, 210 questionnaires are distributed to the delegates of 2 international academic conferences out of which 188 were deemed fit for further analysis 89% response rate. The results indicate that Pine and Gilmore’s model can further our understanding of the experience market. However, the findings in contrast with previous studies show that different experiential dimensions influence the delegates’ overall satisfaction in different contexts. For instance, the dimension of education has a relatively higher significant effect on the delegates’ overall satisfaction and behavioural intentions in the context of international academic conferences. The theoretical and practical implications of this study are also discussed.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20141201009
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