Consumer Goals in Vacation Decision Making

Alain Decrop, Metin Kozak

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Résumé

The primary purpose of this study is twofold: (a) to explore which decision goals are used the most when making tourism choices, and (b) to investigate how such goals vary across both product (generic, modal, specific) and social (group, household, individual) levels in consumers' decision-making processes. Results help validate Bettman, Luce, and Payne's (1998) decision goals' typology. They further show that respondents are more likely to pursue self-confidence as a goal when making generic decisions while they will be more incline to minimize their cognitive efforts and to maximize the accuracy of their choices for specific decisions. In a social perspective, singles are more likely to minimize their cognitive efforts, whereas households and groups are keener on maximizing the ease of justifying the decision to their members.

langue originaleAnglais
Pages (de - à)71-81
Nombre de pages11
journalJournal of travel and tourism marketing
Volume31
Numéro de publication1
Les DOIs
Etat de la publicationPublié - 1 janv. 2014

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