Cross-cultural examination of online shopping behavior: A comparison of Norway, Germany, and the United States

While the rise of the commercial Internet has promoted many brands to a globally ubiquitous status, convergent demand for certain goods and services masks many culture-bound differences in consumer shopping behaviors. Adopting the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), this research examines the role of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of business research 2013-03, Vol.66 (3), p.328-335
Hauptverfasser: Smith, Rachel, Deitz, George, Royne, Marla B., Hansen, John D., Grünhagen, Marko, Witte, Carl
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container_end_page 335
container_issue 3
container_start_page 328
container_title Journal of business research
container_volume 66
creator Smith, Rachel
Deitz, George
Royne, Marla B.
Hansen, John D.
Grünhagen, Marko
Witte, Carl
description While the rise of the commercial Internet has promoted many brands to a globally ubiquitous status, convergent demand for certain goods and services masks many culture-bound differences in consumer shopping behaviors. Adopting the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), this research examines the role of culture in influencing online shopping use, comparing differences across three countries: Germany, Norway, and the United States. The roles of cognitive and affective involvement in driving technology perceptions and usage are also examined. After assuring measurement equivalence for study constructs, the study assesses differences in structural patterns across the countries. Findings show that the full TAM model does not hold for the European samples. In addition, cognitive involvement influences perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use in all countries, but the relationship between affective involvement and behavioral intention does not hold in Germany. ► We examine cross-cultural online shopping using the Technology Acceptance Model. ► The TAM held for the U.S. but the relationships did not hold for Germany and Norway. ► Cognitive involvement influences perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use. ► Affective involvement does not influence behavior intention in Germany.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jbusres.2011.08.013
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Affective involvement
Cognition
Cognitive involvement
Cognitive models
Consumer behavior
Consumer prices
Cross cultural studies
Culture
Electronic commerce
Equivalence
Internet
Perceptions
Shopping
Technology Acceptance Model
Technology Acceptance Model (TAM)
Technology adoption
title Cross-cultural examination of online shopping behavior: A comparison of Norway, Germany, and the United States
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