The aim of this paper is to model the relationship between
online hedonic retail shopping motivation and purchase
intentions: moderated by perceived gendered behaviour
(offline and online) in a business-to-consumer context (Babin
et al., 1994; Wood, 2005; Reynolds et al., 2012; Roy and
Ng, 2012). Five hundred and fifteen consumer responses
were used to model the effect of the consumers’ perceptions
of their offline and online-gendered behaviour on online
hedonic shopping motivation and purchase intentions across
five product categories (27 products). The modelling process
employed confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and structural
equation modelling (SEM)