Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions

This paper extends two related studies in counterfeiting by Tom et al. (1998) on consumer attitudes toward, and purchase history of counterfeit goods and Cordell et al. (1996) on investigating the extrinsic cues brand, price and retailer influencing consumption of counterfeits. The three main resear...

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Main Author: Phau, Ian
Format: Working Paper
Published: School of Marketing, Curtin Business School 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32519
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author Phau, Ian
author_facet Phau, Ian
author_sort Phau, Ian
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description This paper extends two related studies in counterfeiting by Tom et al. (1998) on consumer attitudes toward, and purchase history of counterfeit goods and Cordell et al. (1996) on investigating the extrinsic cues brand, price and retailer influencing consumption of counterfeits. The three main research questions are (a) to determine consumer's attitudes towards purchasing counterfeit products and whether these attitudes correlate with and predict past counterfeit consumption/non-consumption (b) to determine whether brand, price and retailer are determinants for consumers purchasing counterfeit products and (c) to identify the extent to which population segments consumed counterfeit products. Data collected from a mall intercept were analysed using various multivariate statistical techniques. The analysis has produced several important implications for manufacturers and policy makers for consideration.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-325192017-01-30T13:31:20Z Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions Phau, Ian purchase intentions Counterfeit goods luxury brands past counterfeit consumption attitudes This paper extends two related studies in counterfeiting by Tom et al. (1998) on consumer attitudes toward, and purchase history of counterfeit goods and Cordell et al. (1996) on investigating the extrinsic cues brand, price and retailer influencing consumption of counterfeits. The three main research questions are (a) to determine consumer's attitudes towards purchasing counterfeit products and whether these attitudes correlate with and predict past counterfeit consumption/non-consumption (b) to determine whether brand, price and retailer are determinants for consumers purchasing counterfeit products and (c) to identify the extent to which population segments consumed counterfeit products. Data collected from a mall intercept were analysed using various multivariate statistical techniques. The analysis has produced several important implications for manufacturers and policy makers for consideration. 2010 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32519 School of Marketing, Curtin Business School fulltext
spellingShingle purchase intentions
Counterfeit goods
luxury brands
past counterfeit consumption
attitudes
Phau, Ian
Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions
title Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions
title_full Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions
title_fullStr Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions
title_full_unstemmed Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions
title_short Counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions
title_sort counterfeits of luxury branded products: what are the predictors and purchase intentions
topic purchase intentions
Counterfeit goods
luxury brands
past counterfeit consumption
attitudes
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32519