• Title/Summary/Keyword: vendor merchant

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Study on Vitalization Awareness of Traditional Markets - Focus on Participation in Management Activation Education of Traditional Market Traders - (전통시장 활성화 인식도에 관한 연구 - 전통시장 상인의 경영활성화 교육 참여 여부를 중심으로 -)

  • Kim, Yong-Sook;Hong, Wan-Soo
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.34 no.5
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    • pp.534-542
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    • 2019
  • This study aimed to provide insight into methods for activating management of traditional markets by understanding differences in merchant perception according to whether or not the merchant has participated in management activation education. Analysis of merchants' levels of perception of market activation found that educated merchants had a higher perception of pre-post modernization satisfaction, promotion of traditional market revitalization projects, and post-support changes in sales. In a co-marketing context, educated merchants showed significant differences in onnuri gift certificates, bargain sales, festivals and events, and advertisement promotions. With regards to perception of management performances, educated merchants showed statistically significant higher responses for items such as satisfaction with the current vendor, increased sales, and increased customer awareness. The results in this study may be incorporated into the policy-making processes of the government or local governments in order to revitalize traditional markets, and merchant education for activation of management is deemed to be continuously necessary.

The Locations of the Weekly Periodic Markets in Jinju and the Characteristics of Their Merchants (진주시 요일장의 입지와 요일장 상인의 특성에 대한 연구)

  • Lee, Jeon
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.16 no.5
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    • pp.517-536
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    • 2010
  • While periodic marketing systems have lasted for more than hundreds of years in Korea, the weekly (periodic) markets have emerged since the latter half of the 1990s in the densely populated urban areas. In Jinju, weekly markets are opened on eight densely populated area: Ehyeon Wellga Apt.(Monday market), Gumsan Apt.(Tuesday market), Juyak Hanbo Apt.(Wednesday market), Chojeon Apt.(Thursday market), Manggyeong Hanbo Apt.(Thursday market), Pyeonggeo Dulmalhanbo Apt.(Friday market), Gajoa Jugonggreenville Apt.(Saturday market), and Gaho Apt.(Saturday). The merchants of Jinju's weekly markets can be classified into three groups as follows: the migrating specialized(full-time) merchants, who sell fruits, fish, and other daily necessities: the farmer part-time women merchants in the sixties or in the seventies, who sell the agricultural products that they themselves have grown around the rural areas; and the vendor merchants, who sell mostly dduk-bok-ki, eo-mug(odeng), and other fast food. The origin and persistence of periodic markets are explained in terms of the concepts of central place theory, the economic/comparative advantage of periodic markets, and the traditional organization of time and inertia.

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