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Journal ArticleDOI

On risk, convenience, and Internet shopping behavior

TLDR
This article attempts to determine why certain consumers are drawn to the Internet and why others are not, and why the perception of the risk associated with shopping on the Internet is low or is overshadowed by its relative convenience.
Abstract
The past century experienced a proliferation of retail formats in the marketplace. However, as a new century begins, these retail formats are being threatened by the emergence of a new kind of store, the online or Internet store. From being almost a novelty in 1995, online retailing sales were expected to reach $7 billion by 2000 [9]. In this increasngly timeconstrained world, Internet stores allow consumers to shop from the convenience of remote locations. Yet most of these Internet stores are losing money [6]. Why is such counterintuitive phenomena prevailing? The explanation may lie in the risks associated with Internet shopping. These risks may arise because consumers are concerned about the security of transmitting credit card information over the Internet. Consumers may also be apprehensive about buying something without touching or feeling it and being unable to return it if it fails to meet their approval. Having said this, however, we must point out that consumers are buying goods on the Internet. This is reflected in the fact that total sales on the Internet are on the increase [8, 11]. Who are the consumers that are patronizing the Internet? Evidently, for them the perception of the risk associated with shopping on the Internet is low or is overshadowed by its relative convenience. This article attempts to determine why certain consumers are drawn to the Internet and why others are not. Since the pioneering research done by Becker [3], it has been accepted that the consumer maximizes his utility subject to not only income constraints but also time constraints. A consumer seeks out his best decision given that he has a limited budget of time and money. While purchasing a product from a store, a consumer has to expend both money and time. Therefore, the consumer patronizes the retail store where his total costs or the money and time spent in the entire process are the least. Since the util-

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A web search-centric approach to recommender systems with URLs as minimal user contexts

TL;DR: A higher level recommender strategy INSERT is proposed that guides the underlying external universal recommender to suggest a set of indexes by matches the title of each top-ranked index entry with the domain-specific keywords in the organization's internal dataset.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Study on the Relationship between Risk Dimensions of Apparel Involvement and Online Impulse Buying Behavior

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between online apparel impulse buying behavior and the two risk dimensions of apparel involvement (i.e., risk importance, risk probability) using an online survey with a structured questionnaire.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring the influence of demographic factors on perceived performance risk among youth towards online shopping in Punjab

TL;DR: In this paper, a pre-structured questionnaire with five point likert rating scale was used to measure these dimensions of perceived risk among online buyers of four cities of Punjab, namely, Ludhiana, Jalandhar, Patiala and Amritsar.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of Tier 2 Indian consumer’s online shopping attitude: a SEM approach

TL;DR: In this article, the authors validated the conceptual model that presents the determinants of Tier 2 consumer's online shopping attitude and the interrelationships among the constructs across the three Tier 2 cities in India.
Book ChapterDOI

User identification for healthcare service robots: multidisciplinary design for implementation of interactive services

TL;DR: A new general design approach is proposed to utilize modeling languages UML and UMLi to describe a service scenario and model the HRI required in a complete service and help multidisciplinary research to make HRI design decisions early at the design stage and guide implementation by software engineers.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dimensions of Consumer Expertise

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of empirical results from the psychological literature in a way that provides a useful foundation for research on consumer knowledge is provided by two fundamental distinctions: consumer expertise is distinguished from product-related experience and five distinct aspects, or dimensions, of expertise are identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Product Class Knowledge on Information Search Behavior

Abstract: The effects of prior knowledge about a product class on various characteristics of pre-purchase information search within that product class are examined. A new search task methodology is used that imposes only a limited amount of structure on the search task: subjects are not cued with a list of attributes, and the problem is not structured in a brand-by-attribute matrix. The results indicate that prior knowledge facilitates the acquisition of new information and increases search efficiency. The results also support the conceptual distinction between objective and subjective knowledge.
Book

Consumer behavior and marketing action

Henry Assael
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of consumer behavior in terms of Societal and Global Perspectives, and segment consumers by individual characteristics and behaviour, identifying the most important factors that influence consumer behavior.
Book

Consumer behavior and marketing action

Henry Assael
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of consumer behavior in terms of Societal and Global Perspectives, and segment consumers by individual characteristics and behaviour, identifying the most important factors that influence consumer behavior.
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