Online Shoppers' Perceptions and Use of Comparison-Shopping Sites: An Exploratory Study |
| |
Authors: | Beng Soo Ong |
| |
Institution: | California State University , Fresno, California, USA |
| |
Abstract: | Comparison-shopping sites currently offer online shoppers various combinations of free services such as price comparisons, merchant ratings, links to e-tailers’ websites, and/or customer reviews in the search results page(s). The utility and market values of shopping comparison sites have attracted Internet giants such as eBay, Google, and Yahoo to the extent of developing or acquiring such sites. Scholarly research on comparison-shopping sites has focused on (1) trust in online recommendation agents, and (2) methods used by electronic agents to produce the recommendations. Our study explored how online shoppers’ attitudes toward comparison-shopping sites impact perceived credibility and usefulness of these sites. We also examined online shoppers’ merchant selection criteria and their likelihood to continue using comparison-shopping sites. One interesting finding from our study was that merchants need to be strong on site ratings and brand awareness to appeal to a wide online market. The finding dispelled the notion that e-tailers presented by shopping comparison sites need to compete, basically, only on price. |
| |
Keywords: | comparison-shopping sites e-tailer websites online-rating sites online shopper reviews merchant ratings search engines referrals website aggregators |
|
|