Consumers' decisions in social commerce context: An empirical investigation
作者:
Highlights:
• Consumers' decisions in social commerce context are examined with insights from both social sharing and social shopping intentions.
• Relational factors (i.e., community commitment, trust toward community and members) together explained 44.4% of the variance in social shopping intention, and 31.8% of the variance in social sharing intention.
• The effect of trust toward members on social sharing intention is fully mediated by users' trust toward social commerce community.
• Both emotional and informational social support significantly affected consumers' trust and the community commitment.
摘要
With the popularity and growth of social networking, consumers often rely on the advice and recommendations from online friends when making purchase decisions. Social commerce in this regard represents a shift in consumers' thinking from inefficient individual-based consumption decisions to collaborative sharing and social shopping. In this study, we investigate social commerce from two different but interrelated angles (i.e., social shopping and social sharing). Built on the literature of social support, commitment-trust theory, and trust transfer theory, a research model was developed and empirically examined. The findings of this study demonstrated that both emotional and informational social support significantly affected consumers' trust and community commitment, which in turn exerted profound impacts on both social shopping and social sharing intention. Trust toward members also can be transferred into trust toward community, which further led to users' community commitment. Limitations and implications for both research and practice are discussed.
论文关键词:Social commerce,Trust transfer,Community commitment,Social support
论文评审过程:Received 3 February 2014, Revised 20 June 2015, Accepted 31 July 2015, Available online 6 August 2015, Version of Record 25 August 2015.
论文官网地址:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dss.2015.07.012