The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-Commerce

Web stores tend to differentiate themselves from competitors by relying on hedonic aspects, such as colour. This study focusses on web store colour and emotions in the online shopping process. Preferences of Western and Asian consumers are compared when exposed to a web store with specific colour...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Peter BROEDER, Nienke WILDEMAN
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ala-Too International University 2020-05-01
Series:Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejbe.org/EJBE2020Vol13No25p075-BROEDER-WILDEMAN.pdf
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spelling doaj-ed79754013f140a09e727823efc25bba2020-11-25T02:37:43ZengAla-Too International UniversityEurasian Journal of Business and Economics 1694-59481694-59722020-05-0113225758910.17015/ejbe.2020.025.05The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-CommercePeter BROEDER0Nienke WILDEMAN1Tilburg UniversityTilburg UniversityWeb stores tend to differentiate themselves from competitors by relying on hedonic aspects, such as colour. This study focusses on web store colour and emotions in the online shopping process. Preferences of Western and Asian consumers are compared when exposed to a web store with specific colour values of red. This was done in the context of an online booking web store for hotels. An online experimental survey was conducted with two conditions, viz., dark red and light red. A total of 220 participants (130 Dutch and 90 Vietnamese) completed the questionnaire. Contrary to expectation, the results showed no direct effect of colour: the light red web store did not induce the highest booking intentions, though an indirect colour effect was found through the pleasure emotion. The light red web store induced more pleasure, which in turn induced higher booking intentions. Cultural differences (indulgent vs. restricted), influenced the relationship between colour and the arousal emotion. Participants from the more indulgent culture were more induced by the light colour web store.https://ejbe.org/EJBE2020Vol13No25p075-BROEDER-WILDEMAN.pdfconsumer behaviourcolourcross-culturale-commerceemotion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter BROEDER
Nienke WILDEMAN
spellingShingle Peter BROEDER
Nienke WILDEMAN
The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-Commerce
Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics
consumer behaviour
colour
cross-cultural
e-commerce
emotion
author_facet Peter BROEDER
Nienke WILDEMAN
author_sort Peter BROEDER
title The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-Commerce
title_short The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-Commerce
title_full The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-Commerce
title_fullStr The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-Commerce
title_full_unstemmed The Colour Red for Emotion in Cross-Cultural E-Commerce
title_sort colour red for emotion in cross-cultural e-commerce
publisher Ala-Too International University
series Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics
issn 1694-5948
1694-5972
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Web stores tend to differentiate themselves from competitors by relying on hedonic aspects, such as colour. This study focusses on web store colour and emotions in the online shopping process. Preferences of Western and Asian consumers are compared when exposed to a web store with specific colour values of red. This was done in the context of an online booking web store for hotels. An online experimental survey was conducted with two conditions, viz., dark red and light red. A total of 220 participants (130 Dutch and 90 Vietnamese) completed the questionnaire. Contrary to expectation, the results showed no direct effect of colour: the light red web store did not induce the highest booking intentions, though an indirect colour effect was found through the pleasure emotion. The light red web store induced more pleasure, which in turn induced higher booking intentions. Cultural differences (indulgent vs. restricted), influenced the relationship between colour and the arousal emotion. Participants from the more indulgent culture were more induced by the light colour web store.
topic consumer behaviour
colour
cross-cultural
e-commerce
emotion
url https://ejbe.org/EJBE2020Vol13No25p075-BROEDER-WILDEMAN.pdf
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AT peterbroeder colourredforemotionincrossculturalecommerce
AT nienkewildeman colourredforemotionincrossculturalecommerce
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