DocumentCode
3106033
Title
Studying customer evaluations of electronic commerce applications: a review and adaptation of the task-technology fit perspective
Author
Wells, John D. ; Sarker, Saonee ; Urbaczewski, Andrew ; Sarker, Suprateek
Author_Institution
Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA, USA
fYear
2003
fDate
6-9 Jan. 2003
Abstract
The advantages arising from the emergence of electronic commerce (EC) are manifold. From automating inventory replenishment to replacing traditional sales channels with Web-based interfaces, the concept of electronic commerce presents a number of research challenges and opportunities. A key prerequisite for leveraging EC applications is a thorough understanding of how customers interact with these applications. A primary challenge for the successful design and implementation of these applications is managing not only the increasingly heterogeneous nature of the task performed in the context of EC, but the wide variety of interaction devices (e.g., wireless phones, PDAs, etc.) that customers use to execute these tasks. The significance and primary contribution of this research effort is to adapt and apply task-technology fit (TTF) theory to an EC domain. Using the techniques outlined by Goodhue (1995), TTF constructs for an EC task domain are derived by applying factors/principles from Web usability research. The TTF determinants of task, technology, and individual characteristics are modified to fit an EC domain. An electronic commerce TTF instrument is presented along with a research model for better understanding the relationships between independent and dependent variables. Finally, plans and implications for future research are discussed.
Keywords
Internet; customer relationship management; electronic commerce; information use; interactive devices; socio-economic effects; PDA; TTF theory; Web usability research; Web-based interface; customer evaluation; customer interaction; electronic commerce applications; interaction devices; inventory replenishment automation; research model; task-technology fit perspective; wireless phones; Electric variables control; Electronic commerce; Information technology; Instruments; Marketing and sales; Personal digital assistants; Usability;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences, 2003. Proceedings of the 36th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1874-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.2003.1174441
Filename
1174441
Link To Document