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Tourism Product Conjoint Analysis×Push-Pull Motivation Analysis×
FagfeltTourismTourism Recreation
FamilieRegression modelProcess / pipeline
Opprinnelsesår19781979
OpphavspersonPaul Green & V. Srinivasan (conjoint analysis); applied to tourism productsGraham M. S. Dann; John L. Crompton
TypeDecompositional part-worth model of multi-attribute travel-product preferenceTwo-force framework of tourist motivation
Opprinnelig kildeGreen, P. E., & Srinivasan, V. (1978). Conjoint Analysis in Consumer Research: Issues and Outlook. Journal of Consumer Research, 5(2), 103-123. DOI ↗Crompton, J. L. (1979). Motivations for Pleasure Vacation. Annals of Tourism Research, 6(4), 408-424. DOI ↗
AliasTravel Package Conjoint Analysis, Tourism Product Profile Analysis, Holiday Package Part-Worth Estimation, Tourism Attribute Decompositional Preference AnalysisPush and Pull Factors Analysis, Push-Pull Travel Motivation, Dann-Crompton Motivation Framework
Relaterte43
SammendragTourism product conjoint analysis is a decompositional preference-measurement technique that breaks travellers' overall judgments of holiday packages into the separate contributions, or part-worths, of each package attribute. Building on the conjoint framework articulated by Green and Srinivasan (1978), the method presents respondents with whole travel-package profiles, each combining levels of attributes such as price, trip duration, board basis, accommodation class and included activities, and asks them to rate or rank the packages. From these holistic evaluations it statistically recovers how much each attribute level adds to or subtracts from preference, and how important each attribute is overall. Unlike choice-based methods that model selection among alternatives, traditional ratings-based conjoint treats preference as a quantity to be decomposed, making it a natural tool for designing and optimising tourism products and bundles.Push-pull motivation analysis is the dominant framework for explaining why people travel and why they choose particular destinations, by separating two distinct forces. Push factors are internal, socio-psychological motives that create the desire to travel in the first place, such as the wish to escape routine, relax, gain prestige, or enhance one's ego. Pull factors are external attributes of destinations that draw travelers toward a specific place, such as scenery, climate, culture, attractions, and events. Graham Dann introduced the push-pull logic in 1977, arguing that the answer to 'what makes tourists travel?' lies first in push factors like anomie and ego-enhancement, and John Crompton's 1979 study gave it empirical shape by identifying socio-psychological and cultural motives behind pleasure vacations. The analysis measures both sets of factors, recovers their underlying dimensions, and examines how internal motives connect to the destination attributes travelers seek.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Tourism Product Conjoint Analysis · Push-Pull Motivation Analysis. Hentet 2026-06-24 fra https://scholargate.app/no/compare