Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
379857 Electronic Commerce Research and Applications 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

In multichannel environments, consumers can move easily among different channels. They engage in cross-channel free-riding when they use one retailer’s channel to obtain information or evaluate products and then switch to another retailer’s channel to complete the purchase. Cross-channel free-riding erodes profits and is one of the most important issues that firms face in the multichannel era. The current study focuses on the most popular type of cross-channel free-riding: searching for product information in an online store and then purchasing in another brick-and-mortar store. It explores antecedents that may contribute to consumer switching behaviors through a questionnaire focused on cross-channel free-riding behavior. The empirical results reveal that when consumers perceive more multichannel self-efficacy, they engage in more cross-channel free-riding behavior. Perceived service quality of competitors’ offline store and the reduced risk in the brick-and-mortar channel influence the attractiveness of this behavior and increase cross-channel free-riding intentions. By increasing within-firm lock-in levels, firms can reduce consumers’ cross-channel free-riding intentions.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Artificial Intelligence
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