With the digitalization of production and consumption environments, consumers are no longer merely targets of marketing, but key players in creating value jointly with companies by participating in various decision-making processes. Much virtual content in particular, such as fashion shows, exhibitions, games, social activities, and shopping, which fashion brands implement in virtual worlds, cannot be completed without consumers’ active engagement and interaction. Thus, this study considers consumers’ participation in virtual content provided by fashion brands as value co-creation in virtual worlds. This study aims to examine how consumer (i.e., consumer smartness) and fashion firm (i.e., perceived intellectual capital) factors influence value co-creation behavior intention in virtual worlds. Data were collected from 410 consumers in their 20s nationwide through an online survey, and a higher-order structural equation modeling analysis was conducted to test the research model. The results showed that both consumer smartness and perceived intellectual capital positively influenced customer participation behavior and citizenship behavior intentions. Specifically, perceived intellectual capital had a greater impact on value co-creation behavior in the virtual world than consumer smartness. The findings provide empirical evidence that the fashion firms’ intangible assets and consumers’ competence in the digital shopping environment encourage their intentions to co-create value in virtual worlds.
In this study, the Extended Theory of Planned Behavior (ETPB) was applied to analyze consumers’ intention to purchase meal kits. The perception of ESG management practiced by companies was used as a moderating variable to investigate its influence and moderating effects between each variable. An online survey was conducted over 4 days in January 2023 on consumers aged 20 years or older who had purchased meal kits within 6 months. Hypotheses were tested using IBM SPSS Statistics 22.0 and AMOS 24.0 programs with an effective sample size of 324 copies (100%). Attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, perceived sustainable package, and price sensitivity of the theory of planned behavior toward meal kit products had a significant positive effect on purchase intention, and all research hypotheses were accepted. The moderating effect of consumers' perceptions of ESG management practiced by companies had a positive and significant effect on attitude and perceived behavioral control.
In recent years, maintaining transparency has become a trend among brands, and a
better level of supply chain transparency has been demonstrated to positively affect
consumer environmental concern and conscious behavior. Consumers may accept
transparency efforts as a signal of the brand goodwill and perceive it as a visibly
sustainable effort that can convert brand trust. In the information transparency trend,
eco-certification plays an important role as a tool to inform consumers about
sustainability. However, facing large amounts of information, consumers spend much
time filtering information, so the accuracy of the obtained information can be
compromised. The Higg index is a sustainable verification platform that reveals the
entire activities of supply chains. However, most consumers are facing an overload of
information that could confuse their processing of any information. In this context, the
present study seeks to examine the effect of business transparency to conscious
consumer behavior and purchase intention. Second, this study deals with the
moderating effects of sustainable knowledge on the relationship between business
transparency, environmental concern, and brand trust. Third, we explore the effects of
high and low level of consume knowledge of sustainability on the relationship
between business transparency and brand trust. In terms of the methodology used in
the present study, an off-line survey of Korean consumers was conducted. SPSS 21.0
was used for data analysis aiming to test the proposed model and research hypothesis.
The mains results of this study are as follows. First, business transparency has a
positive effect on environmental concern, brand trust, and consumer willingness to
conscious behavior. Second, consumer sustainable knowledge has a moderating effect
on business transparency for environmental concern and brand trust. Taken together,
the findings of the present study provide meaningful implications for marketers by
highlighting the importance of transparency and introduction of a transparent eco-certification
for communication with consumers. To successfully influence consumer
willingness to assume conscious behavior, brands are advised to provide standardized
transparency labels, rather than complicated information.