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On the other hand, experience products have a greater tendency to be bought in-store. The
impacts of perceived Internet expertise, Internet access availability, perceived convenience,
product quality concern, and privacy and security concerns
on TCs are stronger for the
experience products, as compared with those for the search products. The Internet expertise is
related to the costs of learning. Purchasing experience products involves a higher level of
learning costs as such products required consumers to own more Internet skills for the
purpose of examining the products and comparing the subjective features, and thus perceived
Internet expertise has stronger effect on TCs for experience products.
Since experience
products require more inspection and are thus regarded as more risky to buy from online
stores, consumers would have to spend more time and effort searching for relevant
information and checking their qualities, and would perceive less convenience, thereby
significantly increasing their perceived TCs of online shopping. In other words,
the lack of or
inadequate information about the experience products increases the uncertainty and difficulty
in examining the product quality, leading to a high level of the TCs. Consistent with Lee and
Kim (2008), consumers perceive low quality of “high touch” products such as apparels and
high quality of “low touch” products such as computer software. When purchasing the
experience products (e.g., shoes, cosmetics, and perfume), consumers may also need to give
more personal information to online vendors so that they can find
out the most suitable items
for their customers. In this case, consumers may worry about the protection of their personal
information which may be misused by online vendors for other purposes, thus, they may
spend additional time and efforts monitoring online vendors’ behaviour and would bear more
psychological costs, finally resulting in the increased perceived TCs.
Results also indicate that there are significant differences between search products and
experience products with respect to the effects of TCs on behavioural consequences. The
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findings show that consumer TCs has stronger effects on online
purchase behaviour and
loyalty towards purchasing experience goods. The possible explanation is that, due to the
difficulties in getting full information of key experience product attributes and determining its
quality, consumer confidence level decreases and perceived TCs rise as the amount of
information available decreases, which will in turn affect consumer’s online purchase
behaviour and loyalty.
In addition, the effect of TCs on satisfaction appears stronger as well.
Such stronger effect is consistent with the previous findings (Engel
et al.
1995, Klein 1998,
Liang and Huang 1998)
which state that experience goods have the highest amount of
consumer dissatisfaction than other product categories.
The results based on product category comparisons clearly show that the hypothesized
relationships differ in the strengths when purchasing search goods and experience goods.
This study extends the extant literature on product comparison by advocating a theoretical
conjecture that the product categories influence the consumer TCs, their causes and effects in
the online shopping environment. Importantly the findings provide guidelines for marketing
practices in firms seeking to develop different strategies for different
product categories to
better meet consumer needs, further entice online purchase behaviour and develop long-term
relationships with customers.
In this section, the statistical results presented in chapter five were discussed in detail. The
next section addresses the theoretical and managerial implications of the study.
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