Publication | Closed Access
Gender and e-commerce: an exploratory study
211
Citations
18
References
2003
Year
Exploratory StudyCustomer SatisfactionGendered PerceptionDigital MarketingConsumer ResearchOnline Customer BehaviorBuying BehaviorConsumer EngagementGender IdentityGender StudiesManagementConsumer BehaviorUser PerceptionConsumer Decision MakingGendered ContextUser AcceptanceUser ExperienceTrustE-commerce ActivityMarketingActual Shopping BehaviorInteractive MarketingBusinessGender EconomicsGender DivideMarketing InsightsOnline Shopping
<h3>ABSTRACT</h3> The authors consider the role of gender as it relates to e-commerce and offer a conceptual framework that attempts to explain why women are less satisfied than men with the online shopping experience. Perceived emotional benefits are discussed as a primary reason women lack support for e-commerce activity. Additional concepts in our model include trust (i.e., skepticism) and practicality (i.e., convenience). Our survey findings revealed that these three concepts—emotion, trust, and convenience—predicted women9s dissatisfaction (and men9s satisfaction) with online shopping, as well as men and women9s actual shopping behavior. The authors offer ideas to help e-marketers form stronger emotional bonds with female shoppers.
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