COVID-19大流行和代际差异对电子商务购物风格的影响——以加利福尼亚州萨克拉门托为例

IF 12.5 Q1 TRANSPORTATION Communications in Transportation Research Pub Date : 2023-01-20 DOI:10.1016/j.commtr.2023.100091
Qianhua Luo , Teddy Forscher , Susan Shaheen , Elizabeth Deakin , Joan L. Walker
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引用次数: 5

摘要

新冠肺炎疫情加速了电子商务的发展,重塑了购物模式,这反过来又影响了出行和车辆行驶里程。本研究的目的是定义购物风格并量化其在人群中的流行率,调查疫情对购物风格转变的影响,了解影响购物风格的代际异质性和其他因素,并评论疫情对长期购物行为的潜在影响。在最初关闭两个月后(2021年5月/6月),我们通过在线调查收集了萨克拉门托地区313户家庭的电子商务行为数据。对八种商品类型的购物行为进行K-means聚类分析,确定了五种购物方式,包括独立于电子商务、依赖于电子商务和介于两者之间的三种混合模式。我们发现,电子商务独立风格的份额从疫情前的55%转变为疫情期间的27%。总体而言,30%的人保持了与疫情前相同的风格,54%的人变得更加依赖电子商务,16%的人变得不那么依赖电子商务了,后者更有可能将购物视为外出的借口。代际间存在异质性。疫情前,千禧一代和Z世代是最依赖电子商务的群体,但在疫情期间,他们对电子商务依赖度的增加做出了相对较小的转变。婴儿潮一代和沉默的一代是双峰型的,要么在疫情期间坚持亲自购物,要么转向电子商务依赖。疫情后的意图因风格而异,主要采用非食品电子商务的家庭打算转向亲自购物,而高度依赖电子商务的人打算限制未来的店内活动。
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Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and generational heterogeneity on ecommerce shopping styles – A case study of Sacramento, California

The COVID pandemic has accelerated the growth of ecommerce and reshaped shopping patterns, which in turn impacts trip-making and vehicle miles traveled. The objectives of this study are to define shopping styles and quantify their prevalence in the population, investigate the impact of the pandemic on shopping style transition, understand the generational heterogeneity and other factors that influence shopping styles, and comment on the potential impact of the pandemic on long-term shopping behavior. Two months after the initial shutdown (May/June 2021), we collected ecommerce behavioral data from 313 Sacramento Region households using an online survey. A K-means clustering analysis of shopping behavior across eight commodity types identified five shopping styles, including ecommerce independent, ecommerce dependent, and three mixed modes in-between. We found that the share of ecommerce independent style shifted from 55% pre-pandemic to 27% during the pandemic. Overall, 30% kept the same style as pre-pandemic, 54% became more ecommerce dependent, and 16% became less ecommerce dependent, with the latter group more likely to view shopping an excuse to get out. Heterogeneity was found across generations. Pre-pandemic, Millennials and Gen Z were the most ecommerce dependent, but during the pandemic they made relatively small shifts toward increased ecommerce dependency. Baby Boomers and the Silent Generation were bimodal, either sticking to in-person shopping or shifting to ecommerce-dependency during the pandemic. Post-pandemic intentions varied across styles, with households who primarily adopt non-food ecommerce intending to reverse back to in-person shopping, while the highly ecommerce dependent intend to limit future in-store activities.

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