Results 211 to 220 of about 29,897 (264)

Authenticity as fact or feeling: A dual‐process framework of consumer authenticity judgments

open access: yesJournal of Consumer Psychology, EarlyView.
Abstract Authenticity is highly valued in the marketplace, yet consumers often disagree on what is authentic and even attribute authenticity to “fake” marketplace entities. Although prior research has advanced understanding by identifying multiple types and components of authenticity, it remains loosely connected to broader psychological theory ...
Rosanna K. Smith, Katherine Du
wiley   +1 more source

The continuity heuristic: Temporal extrapolation in consumer judgment

open access: yesJournal of Consumer Psychology, EarlyView.
Abstract From choosing an established brand over a newcomer to deciding when to replace a product or commit to a subscription, consumers routinely make judgments about how much longer things will last. Across 24 studies (N = 9718), this research introduces and tests the continuity heuristic, an intuitive forecasting strategy in which consumers use how ...
Matthew Fisher, Adam H. Smiley
wiley   +1 more source

The Art of Reception: Field Visits as Microcosms for Development Interventions of Non‐Governmental Organisations in Uganda

open access: yesJournal of International Development, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Field visits are common phenomena with non‐governmental organisations in Uganda. During these visits, Ugandan national staff guide visitors on series of meetings and interactions in the field. Following an actor‐oriented approach and drawing on ethnographic data on 14 field visits, this paper understands the field visit as a microcosm for the ...
Caspar Edward Swinkels
wiley   +1 more source

Tourism Industry

2021
COVID-19 struck the world, and nothing has remained the same. The various industries of the world can attest to how much effect the abrupt disruption amounted to their various sectors and how much it affected them in terms of revenue generation, human resources, and flow of operation.
Sergey Evgenievich Barykin   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

Tourism Industry

2023
Leadership, innovation, and performance are essential factors to achieve the desired sustainable profitability of companies. The relationship between these variables is one of the keys to organizational success, although their study has proven to be complex.
Cláudia Ferreira Leitão   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Innovation in the tourism industry: The case of Tourism@

Tourism Management, 2011
The objective of the paper is to apprehend and capture the evolution of innovative activities in the tourism industry through the empirical analysis of annual Tourism@ events. Tourism@ is an important trade fair in Europe that brings together major actors related to the tourism industry, i.e.: innovative start up companies, high tech small and medium ...
Aldebert, Bénédicte   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Business Webs in the Tourism Industry

2007
The emergence of business webs in tourism has been marked by the introduction of new players to the market and increased competition from outside the industry proper. Technological approach enables interoperability between companies and empowers ally together. The pursuit of added customer value is a challenge the tourism industry faces.
Teemu Hakolahti, Pellervo Kokkonen
openaire   +1 more source

Tourism: The World's Peace Industry

Tourism Recreation Research, 1988
The city of Vancouver, B. C., will be host to the First Global Conference: Tourism — A Vital Force For Peace in October 23-2 7, 1988. The aim ofthe conference is to search out, explore, discuss, and propose new initiatives through which the diverse sectors of the world's tourism industry can facilitate and contribute further to the goal of "Global ...
openaire   +1 more source

Tourism is not an industry

Euro-Asia Tourism Studies Journal
This paper is a response to an invitation from the Euro-Asia Tourism Studies Association to “Picture Europe”. It is a thinking through of what the ideas of Europe and tourism mean and is situated in the study of British tourists holidaying in the Mediterranean island of Mallorca.
openaire   +1 more source

Tourism Demand Forecasting for the Tourism Industry

2011
Practical tourism forecasters concentrate primarily on quantitative causal-relationship and time series methods. Although these traditional quantitative forecasting techniques have attained a certain level of success in tourism research, it is generally unknown whether they are able to simulate the relationship of demand for tourism as accurately as ...
Rob Law, Ray Pine
openaire   +1 more source

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