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Online Shopping and Consumer

Phobia

Patrick Kierkegaard

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• The Internet offers consumers a multitude


of benefits including ready access to
information, instantaneous
communication, and twenty-four-hour
shopping.
• The increase in broadband connections
has lead to more shoppers embracing the
speed and efficiency of online shopping.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Interactive Media in Retail Group (IMRG)


– £80 billion of consumer spending is either on
or influenced by the internet
• £30 billion of retail spending is online (10% of total
retail sales)
• £20 billion of other consumer spending takes place
online
• £30 billion of offline retail sales are impacted by
internet information, research or activity

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• IMRG found in it’s May 2006 survey of


over 3,900 consumers that:
– 52% of respondents intended to reduce their
high street spending in 2006.
– 45% of respondents intend to increase their
internet spending this year (Baiggori, 2007).

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Forrester Research (2007) predicts that:


– Online retail sales in Europe will more than double in
the next five years as the number of online shoppers
grows to 174 million.
– In the second quarter of 2006, on-line retail reached
$45 billion, and that number is expected to surpass
$211 billion by the end of the year.
– Driving the growth: an increasing number of women
bringing their shopping power to the Net.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• A number of consumers are still reluctant to


convert from Internet browsers and high street
shopping to potential online purchases.
• An Internet shopping survey reveals a number of
people are suffering from Internet Shopping
phobia.
• A study commissioned by Enterasys Networks
in 2006 revealed that the public has a deep
distrust of using the Internet to shop online.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Just half of the UK population have ever


shopped online and 43% of us are putting
off shopping or banking online because of
security concerns.
• E-commerce still has a long way to go to
earn the trust of the public.
(WhatDigitalCamera, 2007)

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• A report issued by Consumer Reports


WebWatch (2005) stated:
– A quarter of Internet users have stopped
making online purchases for fear of identity
theft.
– 80% of Internet users are concerned that
someone might steal their identity from the
personal information available on the Web.
– 86% have made at least one change in their
behaviour because of fears of identity theft.
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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• So what is driving the user’s anxiety and


reluctance to shop online?
– Risk
– Fear
– Anxiety

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Online shopping anxiety is closely related to


computer anxiety
• “the irrational anticipation of fear evoked by the
thought of using or (actually using) computers,
the effects of which result in avoiding or
minimising computer usage.” (Brosnan, 1998)
• Several researches have found that computer
anxiety is negatively related to computer use
and attitudes towards computers (Jackson et al,
2003; Durndell and Haag, 2002)

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia
• Much of the relevant literature focuses on the perceived risks associated with online
shopping and consumer attitudes that foster or inhibit online exchange.

• The theory of perceived risk has been used to explain consumers' behaviour.
– Online consumers are concerned with those risks inherent in buying on the Web
such as credit card fraud and not receiving the right products (Bhatnagar et al.
2000)
– Perceived risk of online shopping and perceived ease of use of the Web site
have been shown to influence attitude towards online purchasing (Heijden et al.
2001).
– Consumers are apprehensive when they cannot be sure that purchases will allow
them to achieve their buying goals (Cox and Rich, 1964).
– Consumers perceive Internet shopping to have higher risk than in-store shopping
(Tan, 1999).
– Jarvenpaa & Todd (1997) reported that perceived risk influenced attitudes toward
online shopping, but not the intention to shop online.
– Vijayasarathy & Jones (2000) found that perceived risk influenced both attitudes
toward online shopping and intention to shop online.
– Other studies similarly found that perceived risk negatively influenced
consumers' attitude or intention to purchase online (Liu & Wei, 2003; van der
Heijden, Verhagen & Creemers, 2003)
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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• The most common concept of perceived


risk used by researchers defines risk in
terms of the consumer's perception of
uncertainty.
• The uncertainty can be about the outcome
or about the adverse consequences of
buying a product (or service). These may
produce anxiety.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Six components or types of perceived risk have been


identified:
– Financial
– Product performance
– Social
– Psychological
– Physical
– Time/convenience loss

• Forsythe and Shi (2003) characterized four risk types: financial,


product performance, psychological, and time/convenience loss

• Lim (2003) examined a different set of perceived risks: technology,


vendor, and product risk.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Financial risk is defined as a net loss of money to a customer and


includes the possibility that one's credit card information may be
misused which is a major obstacle to online purchases (Maignan
and Lukas, 1997).
• Product risk: The consumers' inability to physically inspect
products (Spence et al., 1970 and Bhatnagar et al., 2000) and
making a poor economic decision through an inability to compare
prices, being unable to return a product, or not receiving a product
paid for (Jarvenpaa & Todd, 1997; Vijayasarathy & Jones, 2000).
• Product performance: The risk that a product will not function as
expected (Bhatnagar et al., 2000; Jarvenpaa & Todd, 1997; Tan,
1999; Vijayasarathy & Jones, 2000, Horton, 1976).
• Psychological risk: refers to disappointment, frustration, and
shame experienced if one's personal information is disclosed. The
Internet is often perceived as likely to violate users' privacy, a major
concern of many Internet users (Maignan and Lukas, 1997, Jacobs,
1997 and Benassi, 1999).

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Time/convenience risk may refer to the loss of time and


inconvenience. Two leading causes of dissatisfying online
experiences that may be thought of as a time/convenience risk
include a disorganized or confusing Web site and pages that are too
slow to download (GVU's 9th WWW User Surveys, 1998).
Convenience concerns psychological cost and other forms of non-
monetary costs such as time, effort and stress (Aylott and Mitchell,
1998; Cassill et al., 1997).
• Social Risk is associated with the loss of social interaction, are
closely associated with online purchasing behaviour. Perceived risk
seems to deter Internet users from shopping online frequently and
from spending significant amounts of time and money.
• Technological risk is associated with the fear of using the
technology due to loss of security, fraud and technical errors that
have been widely reported both in the interactive and mainstream
media

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

Security and Privacy


• A common perception among consumers is that communicating
credit card information over the Internet is inherently risky due to the
possibility of credit card fraud (Bhatnagar et al., 2000; Furnell &
Karweni, 1999; George, 2002; Hoffman, Novak & Peralta, 1999;
Jarvenpaa & Todd, 1997; Jones & Vijayasarathy, 1998; Liebermann
& Stashevsky, 2002).
• Swaminathan, Lepkowska-White, and Rao (1999) reported that
consumers in their study seemed less concerned about the security
of online transactions.
• Ranganathan and Ganapathy (2002) found that security was a
major factor in discriminating between high and low intentions to
purchase online.
• A 2007 Zogby Interactive survey has found that worry about identify
theft has now reached most online Americans—91% of those polled
said they are concerned that their identity might be stolen and used
to make unauthorized purchases.
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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

Consumers' concerns about privacy:


• Security Risks follow from the consumers' fear that the open Internet
network would allow their personal data to be compromised
(Andrianie, 1999).
• The unauthorized acquisition of personal information during Internet
use or the provision of personal information collected by companies
to third parties (Furnell & Karweni, 1999; George, 2002; Hoffman et
al., 1999; Lim, 2003; Wang, Lee & Wang, 1998).
• A large number of Internet consumers do not trust Web providers
enough to exchange personal information with them (Hoffman et al.,
1999; Liebermann & Stashevsky, 2002).
• Increasing privacy concerns is the likelihood of a decrease in
purchasing online (Hoffman et al., 1999).
• George (2002) found that a belief in the privacy of personal
information was associated with negative attitudes toward Internet
purchasing.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

Fraudulent card transactions


• Although online transactions only account for around
11% of all credit card transactions, they account for 23%
of all fraudulent card transactions.
• Fears of bank card fraud and identity theft prevent more
than half of consumers from shopping online if it requires
providing a bank card number over a web site
• Unisys Corp.’s Trusted Enterprise Index survey:
– 16% of 1,744 consumers surveyed say they strongly agree with
the statement “Worry about bank card fraud and identity theft
has prevented me from on-line shopping when it requires me to
provide a bank card number over a web site.”

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

Phishing and pharming


• Phishing and pharming continue to plague many financial
institutions and e-commerce websites.
Phishing
• A form of online identity theft that employs both social engineering
and technical subterfuge to steal consumers' personal identity data
and financial account credentials.
– Social-engineering schemes use 'spoofed' e-mails to lead consumers to
counterfeit websites designed to trick recipients into divulging financial
data such as account usernames and passwords.
– Technical subterfuge schemes plant crimeware onto PCs to steal
credentials directly, often using key logging systems to intercept
consumers online account user names and passwords, and to corrupt
local and remote navigational infrastructures to misdirect consumers to
counterfeit websites and to authentic websites through phisher-
controlled proxies that can be used to monitor and intercept consumers’
keystrokes.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• The Anti Phishing Working Group (APWG) has reported that in


January 2007, the number of phishing spoof sites reached an all
time high of 29,930 unique phishing URLs reported in January, an
increase of more than 25 percent from December and nearly 5
percent from the previous high in June, 2006.

• APWG saw a total of 135 brands being hijacked in January with


numerous non-traditional websites spoofed such as social network
portals and gambling sites.

• APWG notes that more brokerage company websites and many


more International banks’ brands were spoofed and hijacked in
January. The number of crimeware variants reached an all time high
in January of 345, up from 340 in December, 2006, rising 1.5% from
that month, which was the previous highpoint for keylogging
crimeware variants detected in a single month.

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• There can be little doubt that anxiety induced by


fear of online shopping technology constitutes a
real phenomena.
• The statistics and studies show is that people
still fear online shopping and mistrust the
technology.
• There is still a common perception amongst
cardholders that shopping online is a very risky
activity and a number of Internet users fear
online shopping!

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Online Shopping and Consumer Phobia

• Companies should address these concerns to:


– Convince some of the e-commerce virgins to take the
plunge
– Build greater confidence amongst those who are
occasional cyber-shoppers.
• Numerous studies have suggested that the most
appropriate and effective way of minimizing online
risk is through establishing trust.
• Specific antecedents of online trust appear to be
fundamental to perceived risk:
– security of payment, privacy of personal information and
confidentiality of processing, product quality, reliability of
fulfillment and timeliness and quality of customer service.

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