ABSTRACT
Festive season rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs) or ‘stokvels’ form a large segment of the market in the lower-income bracket and informal market sector in South Africa and have a high collective purchasing power. This study explores the multi-month, multi-phase process through which these stokvels’ evaluate and purchase bulk groceries from retailers at a substantial discount during the festive season. The study followed an exploratory research design through fifteen in-depth interviews of retailers, interviews that were thematically analysed. The findings revealed four phases in festive season stokvel’s buying process, namely: Need Development, Double-Evaluation Loop, List Consolidation, and Post-purchase Behavior. Each phase encapsulated a number of salient interdependent relationships and prominent time periods in which activities occurred over a year through the lens of the participating retailers. While the actual transaction happens in December, the process usually starts before April of that year. The process is modeled to show when certain phases of the process are completed as well as the actors involved (stokvel, retailer, manufacturer/supplier). To date, there has been no research that has examined the buying process of festive season stokvels through the perspective of the retailer. By creating the first map of this commercial and social process, this exploratory research paves the way for further research into the selling and buying processes in these widely used systems of group purchase.
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Correction Statement
This article has been republished with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.
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Notes on contributors
James Lappeman
James Lappeman is head of projects at the UCT Marketing Institute at the University of Cape Town. With a PhD in consumer behaviour, his focus areas are in African consumer behaviour for both base of pyramid and middle class markets.
Jemma Litkie
Jemma Litkie, Shriya Bramdaw & Abigail Quibell are all University of Cape Town graduates with degrees in Bachelor of Business Science at the University’s School of Management Studies.
Shriya Bramdaw
Jemma Litkie, Shriya Bramdaw & Abigail Quibell are all University of Cape Town graduates with degrees in Bachelor of Business Science at the University’s School of Management Studies.
Abigail Quibell
Jemma Litkie, Shriya Bramdaw & Abigail Quibell are all University of Cape Town graduates with degrees in Bachelor of Business Science at the University’s School of Management Studies.