156x Filetype PDF File size 0.21 MB Source: blog.ub.ac.id
Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management Emerald Article: Attitude toward internet web sites, online information search, and channel choices for purchasing Yoo-Kyoung Seock, Marjorie Norton Article information: To cite this document: Yoo-Kyoung Seock, Marjorie Norton, (2007),"Attitude toward internet web sites, online information search, and channel choices for purchasing", Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management, Vol. 11 Iss: 4 pp. 571 - 586 Permanent link to this document: http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/13612020710824616 Downloaded on: 21-11-2012 References: This document contains references to 41 other documents Citations: This document has been cited by 8 other documents To copy this document: permissions@emeraldinsight.com This document has been downloaded 3819 times since 2007. * Users who downloaded this Article also downloaded: * Yaron Timmor, Talia Rymon, (2007),"To do or not to do: the dilemma of technology-based service improvement", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 21 Iss: 2 pp. 99 - 111 http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/08876040710737868 Kalyani Menon, Harvir S. Bansal, (2007),"Exploring consumer experience of social power during service consumption", International Journal of Service Industry Management, Vol. 18 Iss: 1 pp. 89 - 104 http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/09564230710732911 Graham Whittaker, Lesley Ledden, Stavros P. Kalafatis, (2007),"A re-examination of the relationship between value, satisfaction and intention in business services", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 21 Iss: 5 pp. 345 - 357 http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/08876040710773651 Access to this document was granted through an Emerald subscription provided by UNIVERSIDADE CATOLICA DE BRASILIA For Authors: If you would like to write for this, or any other Emerald publication, then please use our Emerald for Authors service. Information about how to choose which publication to write for and submission guidelines are available for all. Please visit www.emeraldinsight.com/authors for more information. About Emerald www.emeraldinsight.com With over forty years' experience, Emerald Group Publishing is a leading independent publisher of global research with impact in business, society, public policy and education. In total, Emerald publishes over 275 journals and more than 130 book series, as well as an extensive range of online products and services. Emerald is both COUNTER 3 and TRANSFER compliant. The organization is a partner of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and also works with Portico and the LOCKSS initiative for digital archive preservation. *Related content and download information correct at time of download. The current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/1361-2026.htm Attitude toward internet web Attitude toward internet web sites, online information search, sites and channel choices for purchasing 571 Yoo-Kyoung Seock Received 10 August 2006 Revised 22 September 2006 Department of Textiles, Merchandising and Interiors, Accepted 22 September The University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA, and 2006 Marjorie Norton Department of Apparel, Housing and Resource Management, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA Abstract Purpose – This study aims to examine the influence of attitudes toward particular clothing web sites, specifically favorite ones, on information search at those web sites and on the choice to purchase items from those web sites and from non-internet channels after finding the items at the web sites. Design/methodology/approach – Usingsurveydatafrom414UScollegestudentswhohadonline shopping experience and favorite clothing web sites that they especially like to visit, hypothesized relationships among attitude toward internet web sites, online information search and channel choices for purchasing were tested using path analysis. Findings – Results showed that participants’ attitudes toward their favorite clothing web sites had a direct, positive effect on their intentions to search for information at those web sites as well as intentions to purchase clothing items from those web sites after finding the items there. Additionally, operating through information-search intentions at the web sites, participants’ attitudes toward those web sites had an indirect, positive effect on their intentions to purchase clothing items from non-internet channels after finding the items at the web sites. Research limitations/implications – Results cannot be generalized to the larger population of young consumers and to other consumer groups. Future research should include other population groups. Practical implications – This research provides insights into how college students’ attitudes towardinternet web sites affect their information search at the web sites and their channel choices for purchasing. Our results suggest potential benefits of multi-channel retailing for online clothing retailers targeting US college students and the importance of building effective web sites to elicit those consumers’ positive attitudes toward the web sites. Originality/value – This study is the first to investigate young adult online shoppers’ attitude towards internet web sites and their information search and channel choices for purchasing. Keywords Consumerbehaviour,Internetshopping,Purchasing,Information retrieval, United States of America Paper type Research paper Journal of Fashion Marketing and Agrowing percentage of US consumers’ shopping and purchasing over recent years Management havebeentakingplacethroughtheinternet.Arelatedtrendhasbeenrapidexpansionof Vol. 11 No. 4, 2007 pp. 571-586 retailers’ direct marketing to consumers via the internet, with sales growth outpacing qEmeraldGroupPublishingLimited 1361-2026 traditional retailing (Burns, 2005; Levy and Weitz, 2001). The climb in online sales to DOI 10.1108/13612020710824616 JFMM consumers may reflect compelling advantages of internet shopping. Significant benefits 11,4 to consumers of shopping on the internet versus in other retail venues include the vast arrayofalternativeproductsavailableandthequickeraccesstoalternatives.Alongwith benefits as a vehicle for purchasing, the internet offers consumers a powerful means for searching out product information before making purchases (Doyle, 2003; Gray, 2005). The internet’s information-rich, interactive nature can increase shopping efficiency by 572 improving the availability of product information, enabling direct multi-attribute comparisons, and reducing information-search costs (Alba et al., 1997). Thesuper-diffusion of the internet has also widened consumers’ channel choices for shopping. Consumers can now choose whether to buy from online or offline channels after they find information about products in either type of channel. Some consumers may only browse internet web sites for product information and use other channels (e.g., brick-and-mortar stores) to buy products discovered at web sites. Others may sample products in physical stores and then seek better deals online. McKinsey Marketing Practice (2000) research has indicated that more than 50 percent of apparel shoppers use multiple channels for clothes shopping and that multi-channel purchasers spend two to four times more than one-channel purchasers. A DoubleClick survey of consumers showed that 56 percent of the 1,270 respondents had used multiple channels for shopping and that web site browsing was a popular pastimeofthemulti-channelshopperswhichhadledtopurchasesinphysicalstoresby 45percentofthem(Greenspan,2003).ForresterResearch,Inc.(ascitedinKerner,2004) reported that 65 percent of US consumers in 2004 were multi-channel shoppers. JupiterResearch (as cited in Burns, 2005) found that nearly one-half (47 percent) of internet users who browse web sites to find products end up buying offline. The use of multiple shopping channels by consumers may behoove retailers to employ multiple marketing channels in order to be successful in today’s intense competition for consumers’ dollars. Indeed, many of today’s leading retailers market through more than one channel (The Economist, 2005). Steinfield (2002) and Zhu and Kraemer (2002) also foundthatmulti-channelretailing canincreasesales andrevenues. Despiteallthis, no previous research on shopping behavior has examined the antecedents of consumers’ channel choices for information search and purchasing. Research on consumer shopping behavior has shown that consumers’ attitudes towardstores influence their store choices (Kim and Lennon, 2000). It may also be that consumers’ attitudes toward stores in different retail channels, including internet and non-internet, are influential in their channel choices forinformation search and purchasing. This issue is particularly relevant because of the evidence indicating consumers’ use of multi-channel shopping strategies at the same time that consumer shopping on the internet is on the rise. The present study explores the relationship betweenattitudesandchannelchoicesbyfocusingontheeffectofconsumers’attitudes toward particular clothing web sites on their channel choices for purchasing. Specifically, this study examines the influence of consumers’ attitudes toward their favorite clothing web sites on their intentions to search for information at those web sites and to buy items from those sites and from non-internet channels after finding the items at the web sites. The study relies on the notion advanced by Ajzen and Fishbein (1980) that behavioral intention is a key predictor of future behavior; for example, the stronger consumers’ intentions to purchase at a certain store, the more likely they would purchase at that store. With the increasing use of the internet as shopping medium, young consumers, particularly college students aged 18 to 22, are becoming the internet’s “hottest” market and a prime source of future growth in online sales (Silverman, 2000). College Attitude toward students have greater internet access than most other population segments (Kim and internet web LaRose, 2004), with 92 percent of college students own a computer and 93 percent sites access the internet (Harris Interactive, 2002). Their online spending exceeds that of any other demographic group in the USA (O’Donell and Associates, LLC, 2004). Roemer (2003) noted that US college students’ online purchases came to $1.4 billion in 2002 following a 17 percent increase over the previous three years. Clothing is one of their 573 most popular internet shopping categories: 25 percent have bought clothing online (Case and King, 2003). In this vein, our study focuses on college-student internet shoppers 18-22 years old, with favorite clothing web sites that they especially like to visit to obtain information about clothing products or stores and/or to buy clothing. Ourresearchsampleincludesonlyconsumerswithfavoriteclothing websitesbecause consumers with favorite web sites presumably have sufficient online shopping experience to have informed beliefs and attitudes about web sites. In addition, the construct of favorite clothing web sites was used to give our survey respondents familiar referents when answering questions about particular clothing web sites. The use of a sample composed of only consumers with favorite clothing web sites was to: . avoid obscuring the research results by including respondents without enough exposure to internet shopping to have informed beliefs and attitudes about web sites; and . enable measurement of the effect of attitudes toward web sites on information search at the web sites and purchase from internet and non-internet channels. In addition, our research excludes the non-married of these under the assumption that married and non-married students’ lifestyles are sufficiently different to result in distinct consumer behavior (Nielsen/NetRatings, 2003). Theoretical background and research hypotheses Consumers’ shopping and purchasing behavior has changed as the number of vendors available to them via the internet and other means has grown (Korner and Zimmermann, 2000). The internet offers new customer-retention possibilities through the management of relationships between marketers and consumers owing in part to consumers’ access through the internet to more product and service information and a wider range of products than they would have otherwise. Despite the internet’s potential utility as a customer-retention medium for marketers, little empirical research has addressed the role of internet web sites in retaining customers. Researchhasindicatedthatconsumers’attitudestowardstoresareagoodpredictor of their shopping behavior at those stores, including information search (Blackwell et al., 2001; Duncan and Olshavsky, 1982), patronage (Monroe and Guiltinan, 1975; Moye and Kincade, 2003), and purchase intention (Evans et al., 1996). In addition, researchers have found a positive relationship between consumers’ attitudes toward online shopping and their purchasing through the internet (Goldsmith and Goldsmith, 2002; Jarvenpaa and Tractinsky, 1999; Kim et al., 2003; Shim et al., 2001; Watchravesringkan and Shim, 2003). In light of consumers’ use of multiple shopping channels for information search and purchasing, it may also be that consumers with favorable attitudes toward internet retailers’ web sites sometimes use the sites solely to find information about products they buy from other channels. The attainment of favorable consumer attitudes toward an internet retailer’s web site may
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.