Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspective

Orientation: While mobile applications are seen as the way forward for airlines and airports alike, not much is known about consumers’ readiness to adopt such self-service technologies. This is important because of lower than expected adoption rates of traditional self-service technologies (online w...

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Main Authors: Cameron Smit, Mornay Roberts-Lombard, Mercy Mpinganjira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-09-01
Series:Acta Commercii
Subjects:
Online Access:https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/580
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spelling doaj-1b70b05cabef4d36b18fd21050d9ab152020-11-24T21:10:47ZengAOSISActa Commercii2413-19031684-19992018-09-01181e1e1210.4102/ac.v18i1.580326Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspectiveCameron Smit0Mornay Roberts-Lombard1Mercy Mpinganjira2Department of Marketing Management, University of JohannesburgDepartment of Marketing Management, University of JohannesburgDepartment of Marketing Management, University of JohannesburgOrientation: While mobile applications are seen as the way forward for airlines and airports alike, not much is known about consumers’ readiness to adopt such self-service technologies. This is important because of lower than expected adoption rates of traditional self-service technologies (online websites and check-in kiosks) in the airline industry. Research purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine passengers’ level of technology readiness and its influence on their adoption of mobile self-service technologies in the airline industry of South Africa. Motivation for the study: To ensure the adoption of mobile self-service technologies in the airline industry, it is necessary to uncover consumers’ readiness and adoption behaviours towards such technologies. Research design, approach and method: Primary data were collected from 315 respondents using a structured questionnaire. The sample comprised South African citizens who had travelled using an airline either domestically or internationally within the previous 12 months. Regression analysis was used to test hypotheses posited in the study. Main findings: The findings showed that airline self-service mobile application adoption is influenced by technology readiness, perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness; both perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness are influenced by technology readiness; and perceived ease of use strongly influences perceived usefulness regarding airline mobile self-service application adoption. Practical/managerial implications: Effective communication aimed at enhancing the perception that airline self-service mobile applications are easy to use is essential to increase the adoption of mobile applications in the airline industry. Contribution/value-add: The article contributed by applying the TRAM construct to the use and adoption of self-service mobile applications in the airline industry. In addition, the study also integrated the recently refined TRI 2.0 into the TRAM construct (TRAM 2.0).https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/580technology readinesstechnology readiness indextechnology acceptance modeltechnology readiness and acceptance modelself-service technologiesmobile applicationsairline industrytheory of reasoned action
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cameron Smit
Mornay Roberts-Lombard
Mercy Mpinganjira
spellingShingle Cameron Smit
Mornay Roberts-Lombard
Mercy Mpinganjira
Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspective
Acta Commercii
technology readiness
technology readiness index
technology acceptance model
technology readiness and acceptance model
self-service technologies
mobile applications
airline industry
theory of reasoned action
author_facet Cameron Smit
Mornay Roberts-Lombard
Mercy Mpinganjira
author_sort Cameron Smit
title Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspective
title_short Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspective
title_full Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspective
title_fullStr Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspective
title_full_unstemmed Technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: An emerging market perspective
title_sort technology readiness and mobile self-service technology adoption in the airline industry: an emerging market perspective
publisher AOSIS
series Acta Commercii
issn 2413-1903
1684-1999
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Orientation: While mobile applications are seen as the way forward for airlines and airports alike, not much is known about consumers’ readiness to adopt such self-service technologies. This is important because of lower than expected adoption rates of traditional self-service technologies (online websites and check-in kiosks) in the airline industry. Research purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine passengers’ level of technology readiness and its influence on their adoption of mobile self-service technologies in the airline industry of South Africa. Motivation for the study: To ensure the adoption of mobile self-service technologies in the airline industry, it is necessary to uncover consumers’ readiness and adoption behaviours towards such technologies. Research design, approach and method: Primary data were collected from 315 respondents using a structured questionnaire. The sample comprised South African citizens who had travelled using an airline either domestically or internationally within the previous 12 months. Regression analysis was used to test hypotheses posited in the study. Main findings: The findings showed that airline self-service mobile application adoption is influenced by technology readiness, perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness; both perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness are influenced by technology readiness; and perceived ease of use strongly influences perceived usefulness regarding airline mobile self-service application adoption. Practical/managerial implications: Effective communication aimed at enhancing the perception that airline self-service mobile applications are easy to use is essential to increase the adoption of mobile applications in the airline industry. Contribution/value-add: The article contributed by applying the TRAM construct to the use and adoption of self-service mobile applications in the airline industry. In addition, the study also integrated the recently refined TRI 2.0 into the TRAM construct (TRAM 2.0).
topic technology readiness
technology readiness index
technology acceptance model
technology readiness and acceptance model
self-service technologies
mobile applications
airline industry
theory of reasoned action
url https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/580
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AT mornayrobertslombard technologyreadinessandmobileselfservicetechnologyadoptionintheairlineindustryanemergingmarketperspective
AT mercympinganjira technologyreadinessandmobileselfservicetechnologyadoptionintheairlineindustryanemergingmarketperspective
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