Curbing electronic shopper perceived opportunism and encouraging trust
Abstract
Purpose
Consumers can face a situation of information asymmetry in electronic shopping (ES). The purpose of this paper to examine the relationships between: relational variables such as satisfaction, trust and perceived opportunism; and website cues (cognitive signals such as security and personalization, and experiential signals, such as design and entertainment).
Design/methodology/approach
The paper opted for the structural equation methodology to analyze data collected from 447 Spanish e-shoppers.
Findings
Results show different factors that relate to satisfaction, trust and perceived opportunism in ES. Satisfactory experience with ES and entertainment emerge as the most relevant factors to achieve trust and prevent perceived opportunism in e-commerce.
Originality/value
The five contributions of this study are: the introduction of variables from several theoretical approaches to the study of an agency problem in e-commerce; the study of different ways to gain buyer trust and reduce perceived opportunism in an electronic shopper-vendor relationship; the application of signaling theory as part of the process of helping the principal (e-shopper) to solve their shopping problem in a context of information asymmetry; the analysis of the impact of external cues from e-vendor/site, which allows for a comparison between internal experiences and external quality signals; and the study of entertainment as an important hedonic variable in order to have satisfied and confident e-shoppers.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors thank the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Spain) for its support of this research through the project ECO2014-53060-R.
Citation
San-Martín, S. and Jimenez, N. (2017), "Curbing electronic shopper perceived opportunism and encouraging trust", Industrial Management & Data Systems, Vol. 117 No. 10, pp. 2210-2226. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMDS-08-2016-0315
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited