ISSN: 1871-3173
Series editor(s): Professor Arch Woodside
Subject Area: Tourism and Hospitality
Content: Series Volumes |
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| Title: | How unconscious needs influence traveler's interpretations and preferences of alternative tours and hotels |
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| Author(s): | Xuan Van Tran, Arch G. Woodside |
| Volume: | 3 Editor(s): Arch G. Woodside, Carol M. Megehee, Alfred Ogle ISBN: 978-1-84950-603-8 eISBN: 978-1-84950-604-5 |
| Citation: | Xuan Van Tran, Arch G. Woodside (2009), How unconscious needs influence traveler's interpretations and preferences of alternative tours and hotels, in Arch G. Woodside, Carol M. Megehee, Alfred Ogle (ed.) Perspectives on Cross-Cultural, Ethnographic, Brand Image, Storytelling, Unconscious Needs, and Hospitality Guest Research (Advances in Culture, Tourism and Hospitality Research, Volume 3), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp.215-308 |
| DOI: | 10.1108/S1871-3173(2009)0000003010 (Permanent URL) |
| Publisher: | Emerald Group Publishing Limited |
| Article type: | Chapter Item |
| Abstract: | People have unconscious motives which affects their decision-making and associated behavior. The paper describes a study using thematic apperception test (TAT) to measure how unconscious motives influence travelers' interpretations and preferences toward alternative tours and hotels. Using the TAT, the present study explores the relationships between three unconscious needs: (1) achievement, (2) affiliation, and (3) power and preferences for four package tours (adventure, culture, business, and escape tours) and for seven hotel identities (quality, familiarity, location, price, friendliness, food and beverage, and cleanliness and aesthetics). The present study conducts canonical correlation analyses to examine the relationships between unconscious needs and preferences for package tours and hotel identities using data from 467 university students. The study scores 2,438 stories according to the TAT manual to identify unconscious needs. The findings indicate that (1) people with a high need for affiliation prefer an experience based on cultural values and hotels that are conveniently located, (2) individuals with a high need for power indicate a preference for high prices and good value for their money, and (3) people with a high need for achievement prefer a travel experience with adventure as a motivation. The study findings are consistent with previous research of McClelland (1990), Wilson (2002), and Woodside et al. (2008) in exploring impacts of the unconscious levels of human need. |
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