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About
Biography
Professor Steve Wood is Director of Research and Chair of Retail Marketing & Management at Surrey Business School, University of Surrey. He was previously Head of the Department of Marketing and Retail Management. A former Advanced Institute of Management (AIM) Scholar, Steve was Reader in Strategy, University of Southampton (2011-2012), and Lecturer/Senior Lecturer at University of Surrey (2005-2011). His research particularly focuses on:
1. The internationalisation of retailing
2. The economic geography of retailing (particularly related to retail store locations, portfolio management, retail centres and places; retail land-use planning policy, retail regulation, retail competition policy, retail supply chains and sourcing networks etc.)
3. Retail pricing
Steve has published in leading social science journals including Journal of Economic Geography, Environment and Planning A, Regional Studies, Journal of Business Ethics, The Service Industries Journal, Journal of Marketing Management and European Journal of Marketing amongst others. His research has been cited by the press in publications such as The Economist and Retail Week. He sits on the Editorial Advisory Board of the International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, regularly acts as a referee for a range of highly rated academic journals and is a member of the ESRC Peer Review College (2015-2019). He has received research funding from the Advanced Institute of Management (AIM), NEMODE/EPSRC and the Nuffield Foundation.
An experienced examiner, Steve is currently external examiner for Dublin Institute of Technology's Masters in Retail Management Programme, having last fulfilled such a role for undergraduate management programmes at the Saïd Business School, University of Oxford (2011-2014).
Prior to 2005, Steve spent three years at Tesco plc in its marketing and property departments advising on store development strategy both domestically and abroad, and also worked as a Retail Analyst for Verdict Research, a London-based retail consultancy. He is a member of the Society for Location Analysis (SLA), the European Association for Education and Research in Commercial Distribution (EAERCD), National Retail Planning Forum Research Committee and a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (FRGS) and Higher Education Academy (FHEA).
Outside of work, Steve is a dedicated follower of his local football team, Aldershot Town. Between 2012-2015, he sat on the governing body of Ash Manor School in Surrey where he was Chair of the Curriculum Committee. He is an assistant leader at his local Cub Scout pack in Liphook, Hampshire.
Research interests
Steve's research particularly focuses on:
1. The internationalisation of retailing
2. The economic geography of retailing (particularly related to retail store locations, portfolio management, retail centres and places; retail land-use planning policy, retail regulation, retail competition policy, retail supply chains and sourcing networks etc.)
3. Retail pricing
He has published in leading social science journals including Journal of Economic Geography, Environment and Planning A, Regional Studies, Journal of Business Ethics, The Service Industries Journal, Journal of Marketing Management and European Journal of Marketing amongst others. His research has been cited by the press in publications such as The Economist and Retail Week. He sits on the Editorial Advisory Board of the International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, regularly acts as a referee for a range of highly rated academic journals and is a member of the ESRC Peer Review College (2015-2019). He has received research funding from the Advanced Institute of Management (AIM), NEMODE/EPSRC and the Nuffield Foundation.
Research collaborations
2016 - "Bridging Communities: Retail Managers as Boundary Spanners in Town Centre Environments" (British Academy of Management) £4,000. Principal investigator - Prof Christoph Teller; Co-investigators - Prof Andrew Alexander; Prof Steve Wood.
2014/15 - "Critical Instore Marketing and Store Operations Issues - A Literature Review" (NEMODE/EPSRC). Principal investigator - Prof Steve Wood; Co-investigators - Prof Christoph Teller; Prof Andrew Alexander.
"Current and Future Marketing and Operational Issues in Store Based Retail Environments - The Experts' Point Of View" (NEMODE/EPSRC). Principal investigator - Prof Christoph Teller; Co-investigators - Prof Andrew Alexander; Prof Steve Wood.
"Themes and Priorities in Instore Marketing and Operations - A Research Agenda" (NEMODE/EPSRC). Principal investigator - Prof Steve Wood; Co-investigators - Prof Christoph Teller; Prof Andrew Alexander.
"Critical Issues in Managing the Town Centre Retail and Service Environment: The Centre Managers' Perspective" (NEMODE/EPSRC). Principal investigator - Prof Andrew Alexander; Co-investigators - Prof Christoph Teller; Prof Steve Wood.
2009/10 'Data, Intuition and Social Context: Managing Knowledge in Retail Location Decision-Making' (with Dr Jonathan Reynolds, Said Business School, University of Oxford). Funded by Social Science Small Grants Scheme, The Nuffield Foundation (£7,000).
2008 Project for SONY on "Loss Leading and Predatory Pricing in the UK Retail Industry" (with Dr A G Hallsworth).
2007/08 Lead researcher on the Business Engagement Project for Advanced Institute of Management (AIM) on the UK Retail Sector. Research involved qualitative interviews with major retail organisations regarding emergent themes for retail-specific management research (£10,000)
Wood, S., Adams, R., Lowe, M., Neely, A. (2008) ESRC Business Engagement Project: A Scoping Study of Contemporary and Future Challenges in the UK Retail Sector. Advanced Institute of Management (AIM), April 2008.
2007 Invited Keynote presentation entitled 'Store location forecasting and network planning: an introduction' at Euroforum Retail Marketing Conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 22nd May.
2005/06 Academic advisory panel on the Tesco plc funded project: 'Consumer Responses to Supply Chain Transformation in the UK convenience store sector' (along with Prof Cliff Guy; Prof Michelle Lowe and Prof Neil Wrigley). The final report fed into the Competition Commission Investigation in 2007/08.
Teaching
Current Teaching Responsibilities
Managing and Marketing Retail Locations (Undergraduate Level 5)
International Retailing (Undergraduate Level 6)
Departmental duties
Previously Head of the Department of Marketing and Retail Management, Surrey Business School, University of Surrey
Chair of the Organising Committee for the European Association of Education and Research in Commercial Distribution (EAERCD) 2009 Conference, University of Surrey, July 2009. International conference with 110 delegates.
Programme Director of Masters Entry Programme/ Graduate Diploma in Management Studies (GDMS) (2005-2010)
Member of the invited committee: “Vice Chancellor's Think Tank” (2005-2010)
School of Management Careers Officer (2005-2007)
Affiliations
Membership of External Bodies
Fellow - Royal Geographical Society
Honorary Member - Society for Location Analysis (SLA)
Member - The European Association for Education and Research in Commercial Distribution (EAERCD)
Fellow - Higher Education Academy (FHEA)
Member - National Retail Planning Forum Research Committee
Advanced Institute of Management Research (AIM) Scholar (from 2007-2012)
University roles and responsibilities
- Dean of Surrey Business School (2019-2024)
- Director of Research, Surrey Business School (2016 – 2020)
- Member of Surrey Business School Senior Management Team (2016 – 2024)
- Head of Department for Marketing and Retail Management, Surrey Business School (Prior to 2016).
My qualifications
Affiliations and memberships
News
Publications
Abstract
Purpose – Inaccurate product information on retail websites lead to dissatisfied customers and profit losses.
Yet, the effects of product information failures (PIFs) remain under-explored, with the mobile commerce
channel commonly overlooked. This paper aims (1) to investigate the negative effects of PIFs on shoppers’
attitudes and behaviours in a mobile context. The authors further (2) evaluate the impacts of the cause and
duration of a PIF, changes of expectations towards the retailer after a PIF occurred and how previous mobile
shopping experience in general decreases the effects of PIFs.
Design/methodology/approach – The authors conducted a scenario-based experiment with a one-factorial
between-subjects design. The six most common PIFs of an international leading online fashion retailer are
operationalized and tested against a control group. The final sample consists out of 758 mobile shoppers from
the UK.
Findings – The results demonstrate that the perceived severity of PIFs based on showing customers incorrect
information is higher when key information is lacking. Further, when the cause of a PIF is attributed to the
retailer, it results in higher recovery expectations towards them. The results also reveal that respondents who
have shopped mobile before perceive PIFs as less severe than inexperienced ones.
Originality/value – This research expands the online service failure literature by examining PIFs and its
effects in the specific context of mobile commerce. The authors also provide recommendations for a better
management of PIFs like the incorporation of PIFs information into reporting packs.
Online shoppers make product purchase decisions based on product information shown on a retailer’s website and potentially in comparison to that seen on competitors’ websites. Insufficient, poor quality or missing information about a product can lead to reduced retailer sales. Measuring online Product Information Quality (PIQ) is therefore an essential element in helping retailers maximize their potential success. This paper aims (1) to identify directly quantifiable PIQ criteria, (2) to assess the effects of PIQ and (3) to evaluate the moderating effect of product involvement. We conducted a scenario-based experiment within 3,544 DIY online shoppers from the UK. Within an 8x2x2 between-subjects design we manipulated the factors PIQ criteria (8), PIQ level (2) and product type (2). The findings support that poor PIQ has a negative impact on consumers online shopping outcomes. We also found that the effects of PIQ differ between the various criteria, the product category and the level of consumer involvement in the selling process. In the context of product depiction, title readability and product attribute comparability with other retailers’ websites a high level of PIQ is required. Moreover, high involvement products need a higher level of PIQ than low involvement products. This research expands website quality and service failure literature by introducing PIQ criteria and its effects in the context of online retailing. We also establish actionable managerial recommendations to assist retailers to embrace and utilize PIQ to better understand their own potential website, and thus business, improvements.
Purpose – Different age groups display different shopping patterns in terms of how and where consumers buy products. During times of crisis such behavioural differences become even more striking yet remain under-researched with respect to elderly consumers. This paper investigates the impact of age on retail related behavioural changes and behavioural stability of elderly shoppers (in comparison to younger consumers) during a crisis.
Methodology – We surveyed 643 Austrian consumers to assess the impact of perceived threat on behavioural change and the moderating effect of age-groups. Based on findings from this survey, we subsequently conducted 51 semi-structured interviews to understand the causes of behavioural change and behavioural stability during a crisis.
Findings – Elderly shoppers display more stable shopping behaviour during a crisis compared to younger consumers, which is influenced by perceived threat related to the crisis. Such findings indicate that elderly shoppers reinforce their learnt and embedded shopping patterns. The causes of change and stability in behaviour include environmental and interpersonal factors.
Originality – Through the lens of Social Cognitive Theory, Protection Motivation Theory and Dual Process Theory, this research contributes to an improved understanding of changes in shopping behaviour of elderly consumers, its antecedents, and consequences during a time of crisis. We reveal reasons that lead to behavioural stability, hence the absence of change, in terms of shopping during a crisis. We further outline implications for retailers that might wish to better respond to shopping behaviours of the elderly.
Keywords – Elderly Shoppers, Shopping Behaviour, Causes, Consequences, Crisis, Change
and Stability
Article classification – Research paper
This paper conceptualises the industrial and institutional co-evolution of the Chinese import cross-border e-commerce (CBEC) industry, led by digital platform firms, over the decade 2012-2022. By drawing on empirical interview data and extensive secondary material from industry and government sources, and applying Gong and Hassink’s (2019a) framework of industrial-institutional co-evolution, we develop a three-phase conceptualisation to assess how industrial and institutional dynamics have developed in tandem, leading to significant regional development through CBEC pilot zones. Contrasting with research that has implied limited agency of industrial actors in a Chinese state-led institutional environment, our analysis explores how leading platform firms have successfully legitimised their role in the sector through government engagement and lobbying activities. Further, and in contrast with recent regulatory tightening with respect to the wider activities of platform firms, the technological infrastructure and associated data transparency offered by the platforms has led the Chinese state to set aside oligopolistic antitrust concerns in its regulation of this industry.
Purpose: The expansion of online shopping aligned with challenging economic conditions have contributed to increasing fraudulent retail product returns. Retailers employ numerous interventions typically determined by embedded perspectives within the company (supply side) rather than consumer-based assessments of their effectiveness (demand side). This study aims to understand how customers evaluate counter-fraud measures on opportunistic returns fraud in the UK. Based on the Fraud Triangle and the Theory of Planned Behaviour, we develop an empirically informed framework to assist retail practice.
Design/methodology/approach: We collected 485 valid survey responses about consumer attitudes regarding which interventions are effective against different types of returns fraud. First, a principal component section evaluates the policies' effectiveness to identify any policy grouping that could help prioritise specific sets of policies. Second, cluster analysis follows a two-stage approach, where cluster size is determined, and then survey respondents are partitioned into subgroups based on how similar their beliefs are regarding the effectiveness of anti-fraud policies.
Findings: We identify policies relating to perceived effectiveness of interventions and create customer profiles to assist retailers in conceptualising potential opportunistic fraudsters. Our product returns fraud framework adopts a consumer perspective to capture the perceived behavioural control of potential fraudsters. Results suggest effectiveness of different types of interventions vary between different types of consumers, which leads to the development of managerial implications to combat the fraud.
Originality/value: This study is unique in assessing the perceived effectiveness of a range of interventions based on data collection and advanced analytics to combat fraudulent product returns in omnichannel retail.
In the past decade, China's food retail market has undergone significant restructuring driven by platform firms, enhancing omni-channel capabilities across the sector, and bolstering the resilience of domestic retailers. These shifts have contributed to the exit of numerous international food retailers. Despite this transformation, there remains a lack of understanding regarding the economic geography of China's food retail market, especially in terms of digital platform operations. This paper aims to conceptualise two major Platform Business Groups (PBGs), Alibaba Group and Tencent-JD.com Alliance, and investigate their respective roles in the omni-channel transformation of Chinese food retailing. Drawing on forty semi-structured interviews and diverse quantitative and qualitative sources, the study conceptualises two distinct PBG models shaping the market: Alibaba’s ‘Integrated PBG’ and the Tencent-JD.com Alliance’s ‘Cooperative PBG.’ The research explores how the two groups utilise online analytics directly through foodstore subsidiaries and indirectly by providing omni-channel digital services to third-party food retailers.