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Engaging m-commerce adopters in India: Exploring the two ends of the adoption continuum across four m-commerce categories

Shweta Pandey (De la Salle University, Manila, The Philippines) (International Management Institute New Delhi, New Delhi, India)
Deepak Chawla (International Management Institute New Delhi, New Delhi, India)

Journal of Enterprise Information Management

ISSN: 1741-0398

Article publication date: 31 December 2018

Issue publication date: 31 January 2019

1244

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to identify the impact of factors derived from the unified theory of user acceptance of technology (performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, facilitating conditions, age, gender) and of those drawn from literature (perceived risk, perceived enjoyment and innovativeness) on the adoption of m-commerce in India. It also suggests implications of these for the consumer behavior theory practitioners and marketers.

Design/methodology/approach

Data were collected using an online survey from 321 respondents, split into two groups (high and low adoption level users) based on the usage scores of the four categories of m-commerce- location-based, transaction-based, entertainment and content delivery. Logistic regression technique was used to identify the prominent factors among the nine identified influencers to understand the differences between the two groups.

Findings

The findings of this paper are sample biasness, self-reported m-commerce adoption level, limited m-commerce categories and specific context.

Research limitations/implications

Except the two factors of performance expectancy and facilitating conditions, all other variables discriminate between low and high adoption levels of m-commerce services in India. Social influence, perceived enjoyment and innovativeness were the three main factors that were found to have the most significant impact on the discrimination levels of m-commerce service users in India. Further, it was found that women and the younger generation users of m-commerce showed a greater propensity for adopting m-commerce practices.

Practical implications

Marketers need to focus on key factors like social influence, perceived enjoyment, perceived risk and effort expectancy to persuade the young and innovative consumer target groups increase their adoption of m-commerce services.

Originality/value

This is the first study of its kind to explore factors that distinguish users with low and high levels of m-commerce adoption, by taking into consideration all four categories of m-commerce (transaction-based, content delivery, location-based and entertainment). In doing so, it highlights the need for marketers to focus on factors beyond facilitating conditions and performance expectancy, to enhance the adoption of m-commerce practices.

Keywords

Citation

Pandey, S. and Chawla, D. (2019), "Engaging m-commerce adopters in India: Exploring the two ends of the adoption continuum across four m-commerce categories", Journal of Enterprise Information Management, Vol. 32 No. 1, pp. 191-210. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEIM-06-2018-0109

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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