6 research outputs found

    The Influence of Culture on iTrust Aspects in B2C E-Business

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    This research suggests an online interpersonal trust (iTrust) to better understand the buyer cognitive and affective reactions towards online purchasing. To complete this main goal, this study provides proposition on the effect of culture (Individualistic and collectivistic) on online interpersonal trust (cognitive and affect-based trust) related to web design and buyer behavior aspects towards purchase intention in B2C e-business website. It is important to compare online shopping perceptions between two different groups because the Individualistic buyers‟ satisfaction may be completely ineffective in producing a desired response in the Collectivistic

    Individual level culture influence on online consumer iTrust aspects towards purchase intention across cultures: A S-O-R model

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    © 2015 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd. Building trust and understanding its relationship with online purchasing decisions is important to business-to-consumer (B2C) e-commerce firms seeking to extend their consumers reach globally. Based on the Stimulus- Organism-Response (S-O-R) model, this paper examines the moderating role of culture on the relationship between B2C web design (web accessibility, visual appearance and social networking services (SNS)) and interpersonal trust (iTrust), cognitive and affect-based trust that trigger online purchasing intentions. Motivation of this study includes, testing and comparing individual consumer level cultural (individualism and uncertainty avoidance) values as moderators in our research model across two different societies (Australia and Pakistan). The data of the survey were analysed using structural equation modelling-partial least square (SEM-PLS) approach. The results highlight the need to consider cultural differences when identifying the mix of web design strategies to employ in B2C e-commerce websites, not only at the country level but also in one culturally diverse country such as Australia

    How is web design related to sales? The relationship between sales and web design within Amazon.com

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    Internship Report presented as the partial requirement for obtaining a Master's degree in Information Management, specialization in Marketing IntelligenceThe development of technology has caused significant changes in the business environment and the management of companies, and business competitiveness has become an increasingly important factor. Thus, companies must capture consumers' attention and convince them to buy. Therefore, it is necessary to understand how small and medium-sized businesses can differentiate themselves in an extensive medium like the Internet. This study aims to delve into the importance of web design according to the four defined elements - image, text, color, and video - on the Amazon website. An interview was conducted with thirty regular Amazon.com consumers to understand their behavior. The results provided an understanding of consumer perception and feelings about web design through data categorization and in-depth analysis. The results reveal that consumers question several factors before buying, such as the credibility and trustworthiness they have for the brand, which is influenced by its web design. Therefore, brands need to use the four pre-defined elements to positively influence consumers at the time of purchase and segment their audience to understand the type of consumer and, consequently, each element's impact

    Intuitive judgment and building initial trust in online vendors

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    The importance of trust in Electronic Commerce (EC) has been addressed for about two decades and various theories have been applied to investigate the issue. In spite of a consensus among researchers of trust in a website being a risky decision, they have neither applied decision making theories (e.g. two systems of reasoning) in the context nor created a risky situation when examining their hypotheses about trust in EC. Instead, the decision is implicitly assumed to be deliberative although not enough evidences have been collected to support the assumption. An in-lab experiment was conducted to investigate the above shortcomings in the literature. Findings show that unlike the current belief, intuition (and not deliberation), is the dominant decision making process when trusting an unknown website in a risky situation. The level of trust is significantly different when risk is not involved. In addition, one of the well-established constructs, “situational decision making to trust”, was not confirmed by the collected data in the risky situation. The results conflict with EC and trust literature and clarify the crucial role of risk in decision making to trust. Hence, the studies that have measured and validated trust and related constructs without the actual risky situation might need to be reconsidered

    An empirical investigation of the impacts of website quality on consumer loyalty: a case of baby boomers

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    Online shopping has become increasingly popular with sales of 263billionin2013anincreaseof36263 billion in 2013 an increase of 36% as compared to 2011 (www.Shop.org). However, consumer behavior that happens in the online channel is still under-researched due to the constant change that occur in the online channel (e.g., technological advances). The relationship between website quality, satisfaction, trust, and loyalty are not well understood. However, such relationships among website quality, satisfaction, trust and loyalty on an online environment are sparse, indicating a need to further understand whether such relationships exist in an online shopping environment. Such relationships are important because they may aid in better understanding online consumers’ decision-making process. In addition, while most studies relating to online retail focus on younger users because they are first to adopt technology, online shopping behavior of the baby boomers is not well understood. This study attempts to provide an update and further extends consumer behavior literature by simultaneously examining factors that influence consumer loyalty in the online environment specific to the baby boomer cohort. Thus, the purpose of the study is to propose and empirically examine an integrative model of consumer loyalty within an apparel online shopping context with baby boomer online users. Specifically, the study seeks to 1) examine the associations between website quality dimensions and overall perceived website quality; 2) examine the relationship among overall perceived website quality, consumer satisfaction, and trust; and 3)examine the associations between consumer satisfaction, trust, and consumer loyalty. The study’s conceptual framework is derived from four different research streams; website quality (Wolfinbarger & Gilly, 2003), satisfaction (Oliver, 1981), trust (McKnight, Choudhury, & Kacmar, 2002), and loyalty (Dholakia & Zhao, 2010). Data were collected via a self-administered questionnaire from an online panel called Amazon Mechanical Turk (mturk.com), which consists of panel members who agree to complete human intelligence tasks (HIT) that are requested by requestor. The survey was comprised of two qualifying questions indicating that those who participated in the final survey were a baby boomer and had purchased apparel online in the past six months. The study’s final sample consisted of 169 responses. The majority of participants were female (73%), employed full-time (56%), and had an annual household income of 30,001 - $60,000 (32%). A principal component factor analysis with varimax rotation was performed on website quality items (e.g., system quality). As a result, two factors were chosen for system quality (i.e., web appearance and interactivity); two factors were selected for information quality (i.e., security and informativeness); and two factors were chosen for service quality (i.e., fulfillment and responsiveness). Confirmatory factor analysis via LISREL 8.8 using maximum likelihood estimation was subsequently performed to confirm the factor structure of website quality. To test all hypothesized relationships, we followed a two-step structural equation modeling approach. Results revealed that system quality dimensions (web appearance and interactivity) did not positively impact overall perceived website quality. The information quality dimension of informativeness did positively impact overall perceived website quality but information quality dimension of security did not positively impact overall perceived website quality. Service quality dimension of fulfillment did not positively impact overall perceived website quality but service quality dimension of responsiveness did positively impact overall perceived website quality. In addition, results also showed that overall perceived website quality positively impacts trust, which in turn, influences loyalty in terms of WOM, repatronage intentions, and share of wallet. Furthermore, overall perceived website quality was found to positively influence satisfaction, but satisfaction was not found to positively influence trust. However, we only found that satisfaction positively influenced WOM and share of wallet but not repatronage intentions. Theoretical and managerial implications are provided. Limitations and future research directions are addressed
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