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Tariff choice of online contents based on usage goal and self-control: can I control myself?

Young-Soo Kim (LG Electronics, Seoul, Korea)
Do-Hyung Park (Kookmiin University, Seoul, Korea)
Se-Bum Park (Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea)

Internet Research

ISSN: 1066-2243

Article publication date: 5 October 2015

561

Abstract

Purpose

People can easily track and understand their usage pattern for any content (e.g. movies, games) or service (e.g. card payment, cell phone usage) by using technologies such as the internet and smart phones. When consumers evaluate their past consumption patterns, they may experience two different kinds of regret: content-based or monetary-based. The purpose of this paper is to propose that perceived self-control, defined as the extent to which people believe they can control their usage, plays a moderating role in the tariff-choice process (flatrate vs pay-per-use) for two types of content: vice-based and virtue-based.

Design/methodology/approach

Two laboratory experiments were designed to test the hypotheses. There were a total of 200 participants (86 for Experiment 1 and 114 for Experiment 2) who completed the entire experimental process (i.e. stimulus exposure, questionnaire reporting, dependent variable measurement, manipulation of the independent variables, and control checks).

Findings

The results of this research provide evidence supporting the role of perceived self-control in tariff preference by showing that preference varies between flat-rate and pay-per-use tariff options. Specifically, virtue-based content users were more likely to prefer the pay-per-use tariff when their perceived self-control was low vs when it was high. In contrast, vice-based content users were more likely to prefer the flat-rate tariff when their perceived self-control was low vs when it was high.

Originality/value

There are three contributions of the present research. First, the authors investigated the effect of content type on tariff preference. Second, the authors suggest that there is a moderating effect of perceived self-control on tariff preference. Third, this study revealed the factors affecting consumers’ perceived self-control.

Keywords

Citation

Kim, Y.-S., Park, D.-H. and Park, S.-B. (2015), "Tariff choice of online contents based on usage goal and self-control: can I control myself?", Internet Research, Vol. 25 No. 5, pp. 852-867. https://doi.org/10.1108/IntR-01-2014-0029

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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