Procrastinators’ online experience and purchase behavior

This paper seeks to understand how marketers might capitalize on consumers’ increasing time spent online and convert online procrastination tendencies into purchase behavior. More specifically, the authors explore whether the propensity to use the Internet to avoid work tasks (online procrastination...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science 2016-09, Vol.44 (5), p.568-585
Hauptverfasser: Zanjani, Shabnam H. A., Milne, George R., Miller, Elizabeth G.
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creator Zanjani, Shabnam H. A.
Milne, George R.
Miller, Elizabeth G.
description This paper seeks to understand how marketers might capitalize on consumers’ increasing time spent online and convert online procrastination tendencies into purchase behavior. More specifically, the authors explore whether the propensity to use the Internet to avoid work tasks (online procrastination) leads to purchase behavior, and if so, what the mechanism underlying such an effect might be. Through two studies, the authors find that online procrastination positively impacts purchase, which in turn is indirectly affected by the consumers’ propensity to delay their decisions. The authors further find different likelihoods of purchase based on degrees of tendency to delay decisions, online users’ age, and type of online activities. Implications of these findings for informing managers about the ways to increase purchases for decisive and indecisive consumers who waste time online and raising online procrastinators’ awareness about their vulnerability to marketers are discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s11747-015-0458-1
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subjects Analysis
Business and Management
Buying
Consumer behavior
Decision making
Electronic commerce
Influence
Internet
Marketing
Online shopping
Original Empirical Research
Procrastination
Purchasing
Shopping
Social networks
Social Sciences
Studies
User behavior
title Procrastinators’ online experience and purchase behavior
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