Publication | Closed Access
Factors affecting stickiness and word of mouth in mobile applications
148
Citations
51
References
2016
Year
Customer SatisfactionTargeted AdvertisingConsumer ResearchCommunicationUser PerceptionsJournalismMobile MarketingSocial MediaMobile App CharacteristicsManagementMarketing CommunicationUser StickinessUser PerceptionBehavioral SciencesUser AcceptanceUser ExperienceMobile ApplicationsConsumer AppealMarketingAdvertisingMobile CommerceTechnology Acceptance ModelInteractive MarketingArtsMarketing Strategy
The study is a one‑shot correlational analysis, so causal relationships among constructs are not confirmed. The authors aim to develop and test a conceptual framework linking user perceptions of mobile app characteristics—ubiquity, informativeness, personalization—to post‑adoption behaviors such as stickiness and word‑of‑mouth. They surveyed 503 US smartphone users via a self‑administered online questionnaire to test the proposed model of stickiness and WOM during the post‑adoption stage. Perceived ubiquity, informativeness, and especially personalization positively predict app usefulness, which in turn boosts stickiness and positive WOM intentions; personalization is the strongest predictor, offering managerial guidance for utilitarian and hedonic app strategies.
Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate user perceptions of mobile app characteristics and interrelationships among identified mobile app characteristics, perceived benefits and post-adoption behaviors. Design/methodology/approach Using a self-administered online survey ( n = 503) drawn from a consumer panel of US smartphone users, this study tests the proposed model that explains why stickiness and word of mouth (WOM) are enhanced during the post-adoption stage. Findings The results indicate that user perceptions of mobile app characteristics, perceived ubiquity, perceived informativeness and perceived personalization are positively associated with mobile app usefulness, thereby leading to increased stickiness and positive WOM intentions. Furthermore, perceived personalization is found to become the strongest predictor of usefulness and playful engagement with the mobile app. Research limitations/implications The findings are derived from a one-shot correlational study. There is no guarantee that the proposed model establishes causal directions among the latent constructs. Therefore, future research should test the conceptual model in an experimental setting by manipulating the degree and types of ubiquity, informativeness and personalization. Practical implications The findings of this research provide managerial guidelines for developing effective mobile app strategies involving utilitarian and hedonic benefits, thereby enhancing user stickiness and WOM intentions. Originality/value This paper is the first attempt to develop a conceptual framework that integrates user perceptions of mobile app characteristics into the underlying process of post-adoption behaviors. It empirically demonstrates the importance of ubiquity, informativeness and personalization in building and sustaining loyal relationships with mobile app users.
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