Affiliation:
1. Graduate Institute of Management, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taiwan
Abstract
In this study I proposed a multinational model to explore how COVID-19 mortality salience influences countries' prepurchase online keyword search behavior for products during the pandemic. I used the COVID-19 death toll in 75 countries and extracted Google Trends data to develop a global
search ranking that I called the religious searching popularity index (RSPI) as well as a prepurchase index (PPI) for the test products. I used terror management theory to investigate how the RSPI and product type (home use or nonhome use) moderated the relationship between the COVID-19 death
toll and the PPI for each of eight products. The results suggested that purchasing did not increase for every home-use product, nor did purchasing of every non-home-use product decrease during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the PPIs, countries with a higher RSPI had lower search impulses
for Nintendo Switch, perfume, treadmills, and watches. The death toll significantly affected the PPIs of some specific home-use and non-home-use items, mainly in countries with lower RSPIs. Replication of this model will assist multinational businesses and researchers in identifying market
opportunities for products.
Publisher
Scientific Journal Publishers Ltd
Cited by
1 articles.
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