Factors driving online apparel shopping in South Africa

This article seeks to examine factors that affect consumer attitudes and intentions towards online apparel shopping in South Africa. This is achieved by testing Monsuwé et al.’s (2004) expanded version of the well-known Technology Acceptance Model, which adds consumer, situational, product, trust an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Retail and Marketing Review
Main Authors: G J Lee, T Barnes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Marketing Management, University of South Africa 2016-06-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://retailandmarketingreview.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/RMR12_1_33-53.pdf
_version_ 1850282320976674816
author G J Lee
T Barnes
author_facet G J Lee
T Barnes
author_sort G J Lee
collection DOAJ
container_title The Retail and Marketing Review
description This article seeks to examine factors that affect consumer attitudes and intentions towards online apparel shopping in South Africa. This is achieved by testing Monsuwé et al.’s (2004) expanded version of the well-known Technology Acceptance Model, which adds consumer, situational, product, trust and past experience contextual factors. The purpose of this article is to better understand this model as it applies to several less-studied contextual factors such as enjoyment, interaction and past buying experiences within a developing market context and focusing on the complex apparel sector. Results of the structural equation models highlight the particular importance of enjoyment and interaction in online apparel shopping, and find vast differences based on differentiation by past buying experience. With the exception of prior experience, consumer, situational, product and trust contextual factors do not moderate the main relationships. These findings contribute to our understanding of online apparel shopping in the South African context, notably informing important managerial possibilities surrounding website design, product offering, market research and other issues.
format Article
id doaj-art-6b0d4e05180d4357a098b8f00a141b33
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2708-3209
language English
publishDate 2016-06-01
publisher Department of Marketing Management, University of South Africa
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-6b0d4e05180d4357a098b8f00a141b332025-08-19T23:38:38ZengDepartment of Marketing Management, University of South AfricaThe Retail and Marketing Review2708-32092016-06-011223353Factors driving online apparel shopping in South AfricaG J Lee0T Barnes1Wits Business School, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgWits Business School, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgThis article seeks to examine factors that affect consumer attitudes and intentions towards online apparel shopping in South Africa. This is achieved by testing Monsuwé et al.’s (2004) expanded version of the well-known Technology Acceptance Model, which adds consumer, situational, product, trust and past experience contextual factors. The purpose of this article is to better understand this model as it applies to several less-studied contextual factors such as enjoyment, interaction and past buying experiences within a developing market context and focusing on the complex apparel sector. Results of the structural equation models highlight the particular importance of enjoyment and interaction in online apparel shopping, and find vast differences based on differentiation by past buying experience. With the exception of prior experience, consumer, situational, product and trust contextual factors do not moderate the main relationships. These findings contribute to our understanding of online apparel shopping in the South African context, notably informing important managerial possibilities surrounding website design, product offering, market research and other issues.https://retailandmarketingreview.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/RMR12_1_33-53.pdfonline shoppingappareltechnology acceptance modeldeveloping countriessouth africaconsumer psychology
spellingShingle G J Lee
T Barnes
Factors driving online apparel shopping in South Africa
online shopping
apparel
technology acceptance model
developing countries
south africa
consumer psychology
title Factors driving online apparel shopping in South Africa
title_full Factors driving online apparel shopping in South Africa
title_fullStr Factors driving online apparel shopping in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Factors driving online apparel shopping in South Africa
title_short Factors driving online apparel shopping in South Africa
title_sort factors driving online apparel shopping in south africa
topic online shopping
apparel
technology acceptance model
developing countries
south africa
consumer psychology
url https://retailandmarketingreview.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/RMR12_1_33-53.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT gjlee factorsdrivingonlineapparelshoppinginsouthafrica
AT tbarnes factorsdrivingonlineapparelshoppinginsouthafrica