EXAMINING MARKET SEGMENTS AND INFLUENCERS OF CHOICE FOR WINE USING THE BEST-WORST CHOICE METHOD

Authors

  • Steve Goodman Professor Larry Lockshin, Professor of Wine Marketing, School of Marketing, University of South Australia GPO Box 2471 Adelaide, South Australia 5001, Telephone: (61 8) 8302 0623, Facsimile: (61 8) 8302 0042
  • Larry Lockshin Professor Larry Lockshin, Professor of Wine Marketing, School of Marketing, University of South Australia GPO Box 2471 Adelaide, South Australia 5001, Telephone: (61 8) 8302 0623, Facsimile: (61 8) 8302 0042
  • Eli Cohen Dr Eli Cohen, Senior Lecturer, Guilford Glazer School of Business and Management, Department of Hotel and Tourism Management, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, P.O. Box 653, Beer Sheva 84105, Israel, Telephone: (972 8) 6472776, Facsimile: (972 8) 6472920, Email: [email protected] ; Adjunct Senior Lecturer, School of Marketing, University of South Australia GPO Box 2471 Adelaide, South Australia 5001,

Keywords:

Best-Worst Scaling, seg- mentation, consumer choice of wine

Abstract

Wine marketers use market segmentation to target different products to different segments in order to increase sales, often with little evidence about what influences choice within or between segments. In this paper we provide initial results using a relatively new and very straightforward method for measuring consumer preferences: the best-worst sca- ling method. This paper shows how segmenting the consumers using factors such as gender, frequency of consumption, wine involvement and age produce seg- ments with similar preferences for different varietal wines. Two country examples are used, Israel and Australia, to show the ability of the Best-Worst method to segment markets based on patterns of choice. Managerial implications of the importance of wine attributes that influence consumer drinks purchasing and wine style selection are discussed as well as suggestions for future research. 

Published

2023-01-08

How to Cite

Steve Goodman, Larry Lockshin, & Eli Cohen. (2023). EXAMINING MARKET SEGMENTS AND INFLUENCERS OF CHOICE FOR WINE USING THE BEST-WORST CHOICE METHOD. COMMUNICATION & MANAGEMENT, (1). Retrieved from https://journaleska.com/index.php/cm/article/view/7971

Issue

Section

Articles