TY - JOUR
T1 - Online shopper engagement in price negotiation
T2 - the roles of culture, involvement and eWOM
AU - Levy, Shalom
AU - Gvili, Yaniv
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, © 2019 Advertising Association.
PY - 2020/2/17
Y1 - 2020/2/17
N2 - The strategy of inviting online shoppers to negotiate product prices has been employed by numerous online sellers due to its benefits for buyers and sellers. Social media facilitates sharing information regarding such economic benefits among shoppers, thereby generating eWOM, which boosts online social commerce. Yet not all buyers choose to embrace sellers' offers to negotiate product price. In the current paper, we employ consumer culture theory and the elaboration likelihood model to theorize the effects of culture and involvement on consumer engagement in price negotiation. Two studies were designed to test the proposed conceptual framework. Based on eBay transaction data (N = 498), Study 1 supported the hypothesized positive main effects of collectivism and involvement on shoppers’ engagement in price negotiation. Study 2 demonstrated, in a controlled laboratory setting (N = 468), the moderating effect of eWOM on these relationships. When other buyers shared information regarding price negotiation, the positive effect of collectivism on negotiation was mitigated, and the effect of involvement was strengthened. These findings have significant theoretical, practical, and social implications.
AB - The strategy of inviting online shoppers to negotiate product prices has been employed by numerous online sellers due to its benefits for buyers and sellers. Social media facilitates sharing information regarding such economic benefits among shoppers, thereby generating eWOM, which boosts online social commerce. Yet not all buyers choose to embrace sellers' offers to negotiate product price. In the current paper, we employ consumer culture theory and the elaboration likelihood model to theorize the effects of culture and involvement on consumer engagement in price negotiation. Two studies were designed to test the proposed conceptual framework. Based on eBay transaction data (N = 498), Study 1 supported the hypothesized positive main effects of collectivism and involvement on shoppers’ engagement in price negotiation. Study 2 demonstrated, in a controlled laboratory setting (N = 468), the moderating effect of eWOM on these relationships. When other buyers shared information regarding price negotiation, the positive effect of collectivism on negotiation was mitigated, and the effect of involvement was strengthened. These findings have significant theoretical, practical, and social implications.
KW - Online shopping
KW - collectivism
KW - eWOM
KW - engagement
KW - involvement
KW - negotiation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85065728753&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/02650487.2019.1612621
DO - 10.1080/02650487.2019.1612621
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AN - SCOPUS:85065728753
SN - 0265-0487
VL - 39
SP - 232
EP - 257
JO - International Journal of Advertising
JF - International Journal of Advertising
IS - 2
ER -