INTRODUCTION
Online travel shopping is a rapidly growing business sector on the Internet. The study of Ahuja, Gupta, and
Raman (2003) indicated that among the frequency of purchase of eight product categories, the most popular
category was the purchase of travel products; more than 53% students and 61% non-students purchased travel
products from an online website in the past year. The Internet has clearly changed the way people do shopping in
their daily life, which empowers the consumer with real-time, comprehensive information. Now consumers are
spending more online as they continue to take advantage of tremendous convenience and time-saving benefits of the
Internet. A recent Travel Industry Association of America (2004) study found that over half of Americans age 18 or
older (56%) claimed they currently used the Internet, either at home, work/school, or both. The huge amount of free,
real-time, information empowers customers to easily compare prices and product features across travel suppliers.
Under these consumer-driven circumstances, new business opportunities have appeared in the Internet marketplace.
Even though we are seeing more consumers shop and spend more of their travel budgets online, the total consumer
expenditures for travel has not increased dramatically. In fact, researchers have found that the use of the Internet for
marketing purposes has not substantially increased overall consumer spending, but rather prompted a re-distribution
of travelers spending (Peterson, Balasubramanian, Bronnenberg, 1997). Given the redistribution of revenues among
channels or among members of a channel, competition in the travel industry has become fiercer than it was before
(Hagel & Eisenmann, 1994). To remain competitive and defend market share, online travel agencies have made
concerted efforts to improve the technical and service aspects of their website and enhance the value of the shopping
experience.
A significant portion of the extant research on online shopping behavior has focused on an examination of a
websites attributes (Law and Wong, 2003) or features of an online travel agency (Kim, Kim, Han, 2007; Law,
Leung, & Wong, 2004; Heung, 2003; Tsai, Huang, Lin, 2005; Law & Hsu, 2006; Ho, 2007), rather than on the
travel products being offered. For instance, the perceived quality and value of an online travel site is critical in
attracting customers into the website and attributes such as useful content, access, navigation, design, response,
security, and ease of use are important enough to make customers revisit. Thus, improving the quality of a website
alone may not be enough to keep customers loyal to the online travel agencies, whereas providing an online travel
product in which contains reasonable value along with product-related features such as an attractive price,
convenience,, and variety could increase customer satisfaction and loyalty (Beldona, Morrison, O’Leary, 2005;
Ahuja et al., 2003; Card, Chen, Cole, 2003). In order to develop successful online strategies, travel suppliers should
first understand the drivers of online consumer behavior such as defining the particular attributes that can directly or
indirectly affect customer purchase and post-purchase behaviors. In fact, even though, researchers have examined
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