J. Prodanova, Sonia San Martín Gutiérrez, Nadia H. Jiménez
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Achieving customers’ repurchase intention through stimuli and site attachment
ABSTRACT Despite its widespread use as a purchase channel, the Internet still provokes consumer concerns when it comes to the acquisition of high-involvement services, such as travel. This study, therefore, explores customers’ intentions to repeat their online travel purchases, depending on the level of attachment they develop with a website, as is driven by high- and low-task relevant website characteristics. With an innovative, electronic Stimulus–Organism–Response model that introduces a new site attachment variable, this study reveals that, among experienced online travel purchasers, service quality, security and privacy issues, and entertainment all function as stimuli to incite affective, cognitive, and social activity and thereby enhance site attachment. This site attachment, in turn, evokes beneficial customers’ responses, in the form of increased intentions to purchase travel services online again. With this distinctive approach to observing customers’ reactions to and interaction with websites, this study establishes several strategic implications that can help companies enhance their service features and provision, as well as ensure lasting relationships with their customers.
期刊介绍:
The aim of the Journal of Organizational Computing and Electronic Commerce (JOCEC) is to publish quality, fresh, and innovative work that will make a difference for future research and practice rather than focusing on well-established research areas.
JOCEC publishes original research that explores the relationships between computer/communication technology and the design, operations, and performance of organizations. This includes implications of the technologies for organizational structure and dynamics, technological advances to keep pace with changes of organizations and their environments, emerging technological possibilities for improving organizational performance, and the many facets of electronic business.
Theoretical, experimental, survey, and design science research are all welcome and might look at:
• E-commerce
• Collaborative commerce
• Interorganizational systems
• Enterprise systems
• Supply chain technologies
• Computer-supported cooperative work
• Computer-aided coordination
• Economics of organizational computing
• Technologies for organizational learning
• Behavioral aspects of organizational computing.