Consumer decision-making across modern and traditional channels: E-commerce, m-commerce, in-store
Consumer decision-making across modern and traditional channels: E-commerce, m-commerce, in-store
This study investigates the effect of media richness on consumer decision-making and channel choice, and grounds the investigation in media richness theory, task-media fit hypotheses and cognitive cost (behavioral decision theory). Findings from three experiments provide evidence that consumers prefer channels with medium (e.g., e-commerce) and high (e.g., in-store) media richness for carrying out complex decision-making tasks. Findings reveal that consumers are likely to undertake simple decision-making tasks on channels that incorporate low (e.g., m-commerce) levels of media richness. Findings also demonstrate that product type moderates the effect of media richness on perceived channel-task fit, post-purchase evaluation, and channel choice. These insights should prove helpful to managers in managing content across different channels.
34-46
Maity, Moutusy
5f3d5d42-c5ba-4168-83c7-35b2888654a0
Dass, Mayukh
e0c82784-259c-4643-a828-8e32d11e7725
1 May 2014
Maity, Moutusy
5f3d5d42-c5ba-4168-83c7-35b2888654a0
Dass, Mayukh
e0c82784-259c-4643-a828-8e32d11e7725
Maity, Moutusy and Dass, Mayukh
(2014)
Consumer decision-making across modern and traditional channels: E-commerce, m-commerce, in-store.
Decision Support Systems, 61, .
(doi:10.1016/j.dss.2014.01.008).
Abstract
This study investigates the effect of media richness on consumer decision-making and channel choice, and grounds the investigation in media richness theory, task-media fit hypotheses and cognitive cost (behavioral decision theory). Findings from three experiments provide evidence that consumers prefer channels with medium (e.g., e-commerce) and high (e.g., in-store) media richness for carrying out complex decision-making tasks. Findings reveal that consumers are likely to undertake simple decision-making tasks on channels that incorporate low (e.g., m-commerce) levels of media richness. Findings also demonstrate that product type moderates the effect of media richness on perceived channel-task fit, post-purchase evaluation, and channel choice. These insights should prove helpful to managers in managing content across different channels.
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Published date: 1 May 2014
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 474594
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474594
ISSN: 0167-9236
PURE UUID: 94e515d7-ba33-4917-8c58-5287010b643f
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Date deposited: 28 Feb 2023 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Author:
Moutusy Maity
Author:
Mayukh Dass
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