Netnography: a research method to study supply chain members' interactions in online communities

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-17-2024

Publication Title

International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management

Abstract

Purpose: The objective of this paper is to further the understanding of netnography as a research method for supply chain academics. Netnography is a method for gathering and gaining insight from industry-specific online communities. We prescribe that viewing netnography through the lens of the supply chain will permit researchers to explore, discover, understand, describe or report concepts or phenomena that have previously been studied via survey research or quantitative modeling. Design/methodology/approach: To introduce netnography to supply chain research, we propose a framework to guide how netnography can be adopted and used. Definitions and directions are provided, highlighting some of the practices within netnographic research. Findings: Netnography provides the researcher with another avenue to pursue answers to research questions, either alone or in conjunction with the dominant methods of survey research and quantitative modeling. It provides another tool in the researchers’ toolbox to engage practitioners in the field. Originality/value: The development of netnography as a research method is associated with Robert Kozinets. He developed the method to study online communities in consumer behavior. We justify why this method can be applied to supply chain research, how to collect data and provide research examples of its use. This technique has room to grow as a supply chain research method.

Volume Number

54

Issue Number

7-8

First Page

705

Last Page

729

DOI

10.1108/IJPDLM-05-2023-0193

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