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FACTORS EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL INDIVIDUAL ENCOURAGING THE DECISION TO SHOP AT FACTORY OUTLET Sembiring, Rosmaniar
Dinasti International Journal of Management Science Vol. 1 No. 3 (2020): Dinasti International Journal of Management Science (January - February 2020)
Publisher : Dinasti Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31933/dijms.v1i3.164

Abstract

Factory Outlet is one type of industry that sells a wide variety of household purposes, at first the concept, Factory Outlet (FO) is a store that sells clothing-apparel export quality factory price/cost, and if you want to survive in the service industry should have orientation on customer satisfaction. Along with the increase in world oil prices have a direct impact on rising prices of basic commodities, it is at the beginning enough to affect a decrease in the purchasing power, but gradually Factory Outlet back in the rush by buyers, it is not separated by the image FO selling cheap goods and export quality. The nature of Indonesian society which includes consumer is increasingly becoming attractive when getting bids from these outlets, ranging from a discount program or facilities offered. This makes the writer feel interested in doing research, because as far as this writer has not found similar research. Specifically, this study is based on external factors and internal individual people and their influence on the decision to shop devoted to consumers who have been shopping at the Factory Outlet. From the results of calculation Simple Linear Regression 1, X1 to Y, the obtained determination coefficient of 0.188 or equal to 18.8%, the figures actually mean the influence of external factors on the decision-making is 18.8%, 81.2% of other factors (100 % - 18.8%) can be explained by other factors. From the results of calculation Simple Linear Regression 2, X2 to Y, the obtained determination coefficient of 0.079 or equal to 7.9%, the figures actually mean the influence of internal factors on decision making was 7.9%, the other factor of 92.1% (100 % - 7.9%) can be explained by other factors. Regression results of the calculation, X1 along X2 to Y, the obtained Effect of external variables to the variable decision of 0487 or 48.7%. Internal variable to variable influence decision-making by 0073, or 7.3%. The influence of external variables and internal variables together to the variable decision of 0191 or 19.1%. The influence of other variables outside of this path analysis model for 0809, or 80.9%.
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IN POSTGRADUATE PROGRAM THROUGH INCREASED PERCEIVED VALUE Sembiring, Noor; Sembiring, Rosmaniar
Dinasti International Journal of Education Management And Social Science Vol. 3 No. 1 (2021): Dinasti International Journal of Education Management and Social Science (Octob
Publisher : Dinasti Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31933/dijemss.v3i1.1043

Abstract

This research is a continuation of previous research conducted by Gaston LeBlanc and Nha nguyen, 1999, a survey of the dimensions that affect the perceived value, and a study conducted by Gordon HG McDougall, Terrence Levesque (2000) regarding the relationship between perceived value and customer satisfaction. It encouraged the author to conduct further research to see the effect of the perceived value dimensions on customer satisfaction, which is applied to universities that the author is managing. This study aims to determine the impact of postgraduate students' assessments on what they feel about the college activities they are undergoing with the satisfaction they feel. and explore the dimensions of perceived value that determine and cause consumers to feel satisfied. Based on the tests that have been carried out, it turns out that from the 6 dimensions, only 4 sizes directly influence customer satisfaction. This is supported by the results of the hypothesis testing of these four dimensions that it has a t-value greater than t table.
Aesthetic Misinformation in Local Digital Journalism: A Case Study on Editorial Bypass in Public Service News Production Romarez, Revierda; Sembiring, Rosmaniar; Hanifah, Ummy 
International Journal of Graphic Design Vol. 2 No. 1 (2024): May : International Journal of Graphic Design
Publisher : University of Science and Computer Technology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.51903/rgb91w74

Abstract

The transformation of journalism in the digital age has led to the emergence of local online media platforms operating without formal editorial structures. This study investigates the news production process of a public service article published by a semi-professional online portal, focusing on how editorial routines are adapted—or bypassed—in decentralized environments. The selected article, which listed hospitals affiliated with the national health insurance program, was widely circulated yet contained factual inaccuracies that impacted readers' real-life service access. Using a qualitative case study design, the research draws on interviews with the editor, observational data, document analysis, and reader responses. The results reveal a linear, individualized editorial workflow in which a single actor handled all stages of production without verification protocols. Visual design elements such as structured layouts and official-like typography were employed to simulate credibility, resulting in what this paper terms aesthetic misinformation. While the article was produced to serve the public, the absence of institutional oversight contributed to its unreliability. The findings contribute to media and communication studies by highlighting the tension between visual legitimacy and journalistic integrity in grassroots media production. The study recommends adopting lightweight editorial standards and reflexive design practices to promote ethical information dissemination in non-institutionalized news environments.