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Experience and facilitating conditions as impediments to consumers’ new technology adoption

Experience and facilitating conditions as impediments to consumers’ new technology adoption
Experience and facilitating conditions as impediments to consumers’ new technology adoption

The recent proliferation of new technologies and impediments to their adoption has made predicting new technology adoption/use complex and challenging. This paper aims to compare the predictive ability of behavioural expectation (BE) and behavioural intention (BI) given such impediments. BE predicts an attempt to perform a targeted behaviour, whereas BI predicts the likelihood of actually performing a targeted behaviour. An online longitudinal experiment was designed to examine the effects of two contrasting sources of impediments to new technology adoption: experience (internal) and facilitating conditions (external). The results confirm the tendency of subjects, who responded to BI measures, to make overestimations when they think they have more control over the (internal) impediments, and to make exaggerated underestimations when they think they have less control over the (external) impediments. Moreover, it is found that subjects who responded to BE measures have a stronger adoption–use correlation compared to subjects who responded to BI measures regardless of the type of impediments encountered. This study offers a basis for marketers to increase the rate of consumers’ adoption/use of new technology such as mobile applications. The research identifies boundary conditions to the predictive ability of BE and BI in the context of mobile applications adoption/use.

behavioural expectations, behavioural intentions, experience, facilitating conditions, Impediments
0959-3969
79-98
Mahardika, Harryadin
fe3415db-4649-4c36-a1c6-04615d78b222
Thomas, Dominic
18d599f9-87e4-43da-a2a8-d50c81549fe5
Ewing, Michael Thomas
bf76a231-db29-42bc-bae9-29efbd163e59
Japutra, Arnold
004a3f8c-4d07-4cc7-8660-c5b3a5983760
Mahardika, Harryadin
fe3415db-4649-4c36-a1c6-04615d78b222
Thomas, Dominic
18d599f9-87e4-43da-a2a8-d50c81549fe5
Ewing, Michael Thomas
bf76a231-db29-42bc-bae9-29efbd163e59
Japutra, Arnold
004a3f8c-4d07-4cc7-8660-c5b3a5983760

Mahardika, Harryadin, Thomas, Dominic, Ewing, Michael Thomas and Japutra, Arnold (2019) Experience and facilitating conditions as impediments to consumers’ new technology adoption. International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research, 29 (1), 79-98. (doi:10.1080/09593969.2018.1556181).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The recent proliferation of new technologies and impediments to their adoption has made predicting new technology adoption/use complex and challenging. This paper aims to compare the predictive ability of behavioural expectation (BE) and behavioural intention (BI) given such impediments. BE predicts an attempt to perform a targeted behaviour, whereas BI predicts the likelihood of actually performing a targeted behaviour. An online longitudinal experiment was designed to examine the effects of two contrasting sources of impediments to new technology adoption: experience (internal) and facilitating conditions (external). The results confirm the tendency of subjects, who responded to BI measures, to make overestimations when they think they have more control over the (internal) impediments, and to make exaggerated underestimations when they think they have less control over the (external) impediments. Moreover, it is found that subjects who responded to BE measures have a stronger adoption–use correlation compared to subjects who responded to BI measures regardless of the type of impediments encountered. This study offers a basis for marketers to increase the rate of consumers’ adoption/use of new technology such as mobile applications. The research identifies boundary conditions to the predictive ability of BE and BI in the context of mobile applications adoption/use.

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More information

Published date: 1 January 2019
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords: behavioural expectations, behavioural intentions, experience, facilitating conditions, Impediments

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500188
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500188
ISSN: 0959-3969
PURE UUID: a6f39563-fc6c-4588-ba01-3a8aa070447b
ORCID for Arnold Japutra: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0513-8792

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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2025 17:05
Last modified: 23 Apr 2025 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Harryadin Mahardika
Author: Dominic Thomas
Author: Michael Thomas Ewing
Author: Arnold Japutra ORCID iD

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