Title :
Financial data at corporate Web sites: do information clienteles matter?
Author :
Ettredge, Michael ; Richardson, Vernon J. ; Scholz, Susan
Author_Institution :
Kansas Univ., Lawrence, KS, USA
Abstract :
The study examines whether the nature of financial information provided at Web sites varies across firms with differences in three information clienteles: individual investors, financial analysts and the business press. Our findings are consistent with theories that link effective and persuasive information content (subjective/benefit-related versus objective/attribute-related) with the expertise level of the consumer (novice versus expert). Specifically, we find that companies with higher levels of individual ownership are more likely to provide information which is benefit-related and suitable for users with relatively low levels of financial expertise. Conversely, information emphasized by firms with greater analyst following is generally objective, attribute-related data, as expected for users with greater expertise. Companies with higher press following tend to provide information which exhibits attributes of both benefit- and attribute-related data.
Keywords :
financial data processing; information dissemination; information resources; analyst following; attribute-related data; benefit-related; business press; corporate Web sites; expertise level; financial analysts; financial data; financial expertise; financial information; individual investors; individual ownership; information clienteles; persuasive information content; press following; Data mining; Electrical capacitance tomography; Electrooptic effects; Financial management; Hip; Information analysis; Internet; Roads; Stock markets; Tellurium;
Conference_Titel :
System Sciences, 2000. Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Hawaii International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0493-0
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.2000.926860