Deakin University
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Are sport consumers unique? Consumer behavior within crowded sport markets

journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-01, 00:00 authored by Hunter FujakHunter Fujak, S Frawley, H McDonald, S Bush
Sport consumers and markets have traditionally been thought to exhibit unique behaviors from traditional consumer products, particularly in respect to perceptions of loyalty. Yet, despite sport landscapes becoming increasingly crowded, there has been scant research measuring consumers' repeat behavior in the context of the dense sports market. Through this research, we address this gap by applying Dirichlet modeling against the behaviors of 1,500 Australian sport consumers. Two questions are explored: First, do sport attendance markets exhibit purchase characteristics distinct from typical consumer markets? Second, do consumers treat sport leagues as complimentary or substitutable goods? The results provide evidence that consumer patterns within the sport attendance market are consistent to other repeat-purchase consumer markets. This finding further diminishes the long-held notion that sport requires unique methods of management. Furthermore, it was found that fans consume sport teams as complimentary products. As sport teams largely share their fans with other teams, practitioners must reorient their expectations around fan loyalty.

History

Journal

Journal of sport management

Volume

32

Pagination

362-375

Location

Champaign, Ill.

ISSN

0888-4773

eISSN

1543-270X

Language

Eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Human Kinetics, Inc.

Issue

4

Publisher

Human Kinetics