Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/108499
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Type: Theses
Title: Consumer reactions to deal popularity information: cue congruency, perceived authenticity, service types, and cultural difference
Author: Kao, (Karen) Chia-Yin
Issue Date: 2017
School/Discipline: Business School
Abstract: This research was undertaken to examine how online deal popularity influences consumer reactions and the conditions under which the effects take place using scenario - based experiments. Three studies were conducted and reported in this thesis. Study I tests a model that is underpinned by cue utilisation theory that reactions to online deal popularity may be mediated by service quality expectation and the effect will vary across service types, namely, experience and credence services. The findings support the theorised model in demonstrating that consumers who face high online deal popularity tend to have high service quality expectation, which in turn, increases their willingness to recommend and their intention to purchase a service in a deal. Furthermore, Study I provides evidence that the effect of deal popularity on service quality expectation is significant for credence services and not significant for experience services. Study II extends Study I by examining cue congruency effect and consumers’ perceived information authenticity as the boundary conditions that may modify the effect. Results support the moderating effect of cue congruency and perceived information authenticity. That is, when consumers face the congruent cue combination (i.e., high online deal popularity paired with a high star rating) and when they have high perceived authenticity about the online deal popularity, they have high service quality expectation, which in turn increases their intention to purchase the service deal. In addition, while congruent cues indeed amplify the effect of online deal popularity, high deal popularity can influence service quality expectation even when incongruently paired with another cue (i.e., a low star rating). This suggests the dominant role of online deal popularity under incongruent cue combinations. Using an observational learning perspective, Study III examines consumers’ risk perceptions toward online deal popularity by considering the purchase uncertainty in online shopping for service deals. In addition, Study III compares the effect between two countries, Australia and Taiwan, using Hofstede’s cultural value dimension scores and Hall’s cultural context as the proxies of cultural differences. Results suggest that perceived performance risk and psychological risk mediate the effect of online deal popularity on purchase intention in both countries. With the significant mediating effect of perceived risks, the direction of the influence for Australian consumers is opposite to that for Taiwanese consumers. Australian consumers were found to perceive high performance and psychological risk when facing high online deal popularity, which subsequently reduces their intentions to purchase a service in a deal. By contrast, Taiwanese consumers were found to have low performance and psychological risk when facing high online deal popularity which increased their purchase intention. The three studies that comprise this thesis enhance current understanding of the effects of online deal popularity and the mechanism and boundary conditions through which it operates. Thus it contributes to cue utilisation and observational learning theory in service marketing and the broader consumer behaviour literature. Practical implications have been provided for e-retailers to leverage on online deal popularity as a marketing signal to influence consumers’ service quality expectations and risk perceptions by considering service types, national cultures, perceived information authenticity, and cue congruency for service deal promotions.
Advisor: Rao Hill, Sally Li
Troshani, Indrit
Dissertation Note: Thesis (Ph.D.) (Research by Publication) -- University of Adelaide, Business School, 2017.
Keywords: deal popularity
online shopping
service quality
purchase intention
cue utilisation
congruency
authenticity
culture
risk perception
Research by Publication
Provenance: This electronic version is made publicly available by the University of Adelaide in accordance with its open access policy for student theses. Copyright in this thesis remains with the author. This thesis may incorporate third party material which has been used by the author pursuant to Fair Dealing exceptions. If you are the owner of any included third party copyright material you wish to be removed from this electronic version, please complete the take down form located at: http://www.adelaide.edu.au/legals
DOI: 10.4225/55/59deedc6ba339
Appears in Collections:Research Theses

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