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  • 标题:Student perception of online shopping and Web 2.0 tools: the case of Croatia.
  • 作者:Jakovic, Bozidar ; Knezevic, Blazenka ; Strugar, Ivan
  • 期刊名称:Annals of DAAAM & Proceedings
  • 印刷版ISSN:1726-9679
  • 出版年度:2011
  • 期号:January
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:DAAAM International Vienna
  • 摘要:Key words: Web 2.0, e-commerce, online shopping, customer behavior

Student perception of online shopping and Web 2.0 tools: the case of Croatia.


Jakovic, Bozidar ; Knezevic, Blazenka ; Strugar, Ivan 等


Abstract: Student population tends to intensively search for relevant information on product and purchasing processes prior to the purchasing decision. It can be expected that in the very near future this population will have a major impact on the online retail revenue generation. This paper examines the attitudes of students toward online shopping and Web 2.0 tools. The main findings show that more experienced Internet users are more likely to become online shoppers. A comparison of monthly income leads us to the conclusion that the higher their monthly income the more likely they are to shop online.

Key words: Web 2.0, e-commerce, online shopping, customer behavior

1. INTRODUCTION

Companies nowadays can't imagine doing their business without the use of the Internet and its technologies. At the beginning of the development of Web technologies companies owned informative Web site with basic information about the company. After that they started adding information about products and services offered to eventually develop into information Web portals.

Web portals are important channels of any organization through which it disseminates information about the organization. Organizations should pay adequate attention to fulfill customers' expectations and requirement (Esse & Majerik, 2008).

2. WEB PORTALS AND WEB 2.0

O'Reilly Media organized the first conference devoted to Web 2.0 in 2004 and the term has been applied to any new Web-related activity. Web technologies let users work in the Internet cloud in the same way they work on their own desktops, but with the advantage of a collaborative culture. The key point is that the Web is the workplace, and users create the value. The key to Web 2.0 involves users to add value (Serrano & Torres, 2010).

Major characteristics of Web 2.0 tools are openness, freedom and collective intelligence. Web browser became the platform for using Web 2.0 systems. Investments in the development of Web 2.0 systems very quickly generate a refund--ROI--return on equity (Ruzic & Andrlic, 2009).

Web 2.0 tools may have been the most influential new media in decades. The Internet became an information channel used more and more, the consumers trusting it with 35% more in 2010 compare to the last year against television (Ratiu et al., 2010).

Attitudes of student population could be very significant when testing the possibilities of Internet as a communication channel for retail businesses. Moreover, the given population in a relatively short period is going to become crucial in decision making regarding larger purchases, so their attitudes towards Internet as a source of purchasing information will become even more important from the retailers point of view.

2. METHODOLOGY AND SAMPLE DESCRIPTION

In this research the survey was taken on student population. An online questionnaire was formed and it included 16 questions of different types: 7 one choice question; 9 Likert scale ranking questions and 3 questions had an open-ended option. The questions were divided into several groups: (1) Demographic characteristics; (2) Modalities and motives for Internet usage; (3) Online shopping behavior; (4) Attitudes towards online shopping issues.

Research took place in February 2011. The gathered poll consisted of 564 answered questionnaires and 550 of them were fully valid.

The gender structure of the sample was in the accordance with the student population within faculties of economics and business in Croatia. The sample consists of 71,8% of female and 27,8% of male students.

Monthly income in the sample corresponds to the structure of student population in Croatia. A huge proportion of students have monthly income (in terms of allowances, scholarships, wages and/or part time job fees) less than 1000 kunas (i.e. less than 135 EUR), while there is a certain proportion of working students that have a larger amounts of money available for monthly spending.

The majority of students use Internet for more than 7 years (70%). There are only a few new Internet users at the sample (0,2%). So we can conclude that this student generation has been growing up with digital technology since their childhood.

3. RESEARCH RESULTS

Turban (2008) gives a list of benefits of e-commerce for consumers and he emphasizes some of them. Students are asked to compare benefits of online stores to traditional stores. Ranking of benefits of online shopping is given in Tab. 1.

In the table, the most frequent attitude towards each benefit is shown, too (see column "mod"). Availability of the product that is not sold at particular market is the most important benefit of shopping online. The possibility of comparing prices and products follows. The benefit "no pressure by salesmen" has the "very important" mod in 33,21% cases.

When choosing an online shop to buy in, customers pay attention to various things, starting from the contents of the page, colors and design to products assortment structure. Table 2 compares some elements of online shops in accordance with students' attitudes towards the importance in decision process when choosing an online shop.

In order to examine the differences in student population in Croatia, the collected data was cross tabulated for two basic groups of students. The first group included students that have never made online purchase and group was named "non online shoppers". In the second group were students that made online purchase, regardless of the frequency of online purchasing within a year. That group was named "online shoppers". The sample included 54% of "non online shoppers" and 46% of "online shoppers".

With the intention to examine the differences between the given groups' chi-square tests and independent t-tests were performed. P value of t-tests is presented in advance.

The male students are online shoppers in more cases than the female students (acceptable at significance level [alpha]=0,1; P=0,0667). The online shoppers have higher monthly income than non online shoppers ([alpha]=0,05; P=0,0000). Online shoppers use the Internet for a longer period ([alpha]=0,05; P=0,0064) and more often than non online shoppers ([alpha]=0,05; P=0,0287). On a daily basis, online shoppers spend more time online ([alpha]=0,05; P=0,0002). Online shoppers perceive Internet motives to be more important than non online shoppers. For six out of ten motivations to use Internet (see Table 3), there is a statistically significant ([alpha]=0,05) difference between those two groups. Groups especially differ in two motives: (1) can shop without leaving home (mean difference is 0,97) and (2) can get information about products and services (mean difference is 0,53).

When comparing traditional and online stores, online shoppers are more favorable to perceive online shopping benefits than non online shoppers. Each answer option is shown in Table 1. The differences in means between groups range from 0,51 to 0,75 in favor of online shoppers and all P values are 0,0000.

When discussing the frequency of web 2.0 usage, the picture is slightly different. For those students who use Web 2.0 tools, Facebook is commonly used more than once a day; it is followed by Youtube which is commonly used on a daily basis. On the other hand, Wikipedia and blogs are not used so frequently. The difference between the online shoppers and the non online shoppers is tested in the area of Web 2.0 tools, too. Table 4 shows statistically significant differences. The differences are significant in the usage of forums, Facebook and Wikipedia which are more frequently used within a group of online shoppers. The results in the paper are limited to Croatian student so future research should be conducted on students in different countries in order to be able to compare the results.

4. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Several facts such as: a high proportion of Internet users within the population, a high proportion of those who use Internet on a daily basis for more than three hours a day, a high proportion of those who use Internet for more than seven years and extremely high proportion of users seeking purchasing information online in order to buy product offline, brings us to the conclusion that retailers are facing experienced, well informed and digitally oriented customers within the students.

Moreover, the findings show that more experienced Interact users are more likely to be online shoppers. That is confirmed by the fact that online shoppers use Interact for a longer period of time and much more frequently on a daily basis compared to the non-online shoppers. Also, the comparison of monthly income leads us to the conclusion that the higher their monthly income the more likely they are to shop online. Retailers (both online and traditional) should develop web places rich in contents and information on merchandize adjusted directly to the student population. Online shoppers are more demanding when making comparison of online shops and they find web 2.0 tools as a source of information on the online shops, products and services more important than the non-online shoppers. Attention to social networks as a tool to reach targeted markets should be included into online communication strategy of retailers as well.

5. REFERENCES

Esse, M. & Majerik, M. (2008) The project Web portal quality function deployement Annals of DAAAM for 2008 & Proceedings of the 19th International DAAAM Symposium / ISSN: 1726-9679, ISBN: 978-3-901509-68-1, Katalinic, B. (Ed.). pp.483-484, DAAAM International, Vienna

Ratiu, M.P., Negricea, C.I. & Oprescu, A.E. (2010) Analysis of the market of advertising services in Romania in the context of the present economic challenges Annals of DAAAM for 2010 & Proceedings of the 21th DAAAM Symposium / ISSN: 1726-9679, ISBN: 978-3-901509-73-5, Katalinic, B. (Ed.). pp.751-752, DAAAM International, Vienna

Ruzic, D. & Andrlic, B. (2009). Analysis of using internet technology in hospitality marketing Annals of DAAAM for 2009 & Proceedings of the 20th DAAAM Symposium / ISSN: 1726-9679, ISBN: 978-3-901509-70-4, Katalinic, B. (Ed.). pp.91-02, DAAAM International, Vienna

Serrano, N. & Torres, J. M. (2010) Web 2.0 for Practitioners, 1EEE Software, pp. 11-15

Turban, E. (2008). Electronic Commerce: A Managerial Perspective, Pearson Education; ISBN-10: 9780132243315
Tab. 1. Benefits of online shopping compared to traditional
stores ranked by rating averages

 rating (Important+very
Online shopping benefits average important)/TOTAL

I can purchase products which are 3,9 73,06%
not available at m city/country

It is easier to compare prices and 3,74 65,16%
product information

I can shop abroad without traveling 3,69 66,55%
costs

It is easier to find interesting 3,69 63,00%
products/services

There is no pressure by salesmen 3,66 62,94%
like in traditional stores

I save my time 3,57 58,59%

I have more time to choose and 3,55 57,79%
evaluate productalservices than in
traditional stores

I can shop 24/7 3,51 55,68%

I can find products/services which 3,47 53,44%
are not available at traditional stores

Offers are more favorable than in 3,47 50,81%
traditional stores

I can focus to buy only necessary 3,37 50,27%
pro ducts/services more easily (there
is less impulse buying)

Process of purchasing is more 3,27 43,74%
simple and takes less effort than in
traditional stores

 mod
Online shopping benefits mod /TOTAL

I can purchase products which are important 37,43%
not available at m city/country

It is easier to compare prices and Important 39,17%
product information

I can shop abroad without traveling Important 38,88%
costs

It is easier to find interesting important 40,79%
products/services

There is no pressure by salesmen very 33,21%
like in traditional stores important

I save my time important 35,44%

I have more time to choose and important 35,33%
evaluate productalservices than in
traditional stores

I can shop 24/7 important 33,51%

I can find products/services which important 32,97%
are not available at traditional stores

Offers are more favorable than in moderate 31,46%
traditional stores

I can focus to buy only necessary important 32,37%
pro ducts/services more easily (there
is less impulse buying)

Process of purchasing is more moderate 31,76
simple and takes less effort than in
traditional stores

Note: 1--not important; 5--very important

Tab. 2. Elements important when compared with online shops
ranked by rating averages

 (Important
 +very
 Rating Important)/
Answer Options Average TOTAL

information on payment possibilities 4,21 83,12%

information on delivery 4,19 82,90%

good reputation of online shop 4,18 82,32%

well structured offer (product are 4,17 80,73%
categorized, search tool is
available ...)

contact information (phone, fax, 4,14 79.67%
mail, e-mail address)

information on products/services 4,13 79,30%

various payment options 4,11 78,13%

added services (more value for 3,95 73,03%
money)

free gifts for purchase 3,45 47,99%

rich interactive web contents 2,91 29,94%
(games, video, forums ...)

Answer Options mod mod/TOTAL

information on payment possibilities important 43,67%

information on delivery important 45,59%

good reputation of online shop important 43,28%

well structured offer (product are important 40,92%
categorized, search tool is
available ...)

contact information (phone, fax, important 40,84%
mail, e-mail address)

information on products/services important 43,59%

various payment options important 42,83%

added services (more value for important 47,16%
money)

free gifts for purchase moderate 36,45%

rich interactive web contents moderate 33,46%
(games, video, forums ...)

Note: 1--not important; 5--very important

Tab. 3. Statistically significant difference between online
shoppers and non online shoppers regarding Internet usage
motives perception

 MEAN MEAN
 non online online
Internet usage motivation shoppers shoppers

can shop without leavin home 1,773333 2,741036

can get information about products and 3,656766 4,187251
services

can read news on public media 3,781457 4,125

can download free multimedia contents 3,729373 4,056225

can watch and listen free multimedia 3,870861 4,087302
contents

can find general information of my 4,506623 4,613546
personal interest

Internet usage motivation difference P value

can shop without leavin home 0,967703 0,0000

can get information about products and 0,530485 0,0000
services

can read news on public media 0,343543 0,0002

can download free multimedia contents 0,326852 0,0002

can watch and listen free multimedia 0,216441 0,0060
contents

can find general information of my 0,106923 0,0285
personal interest

Tab. 4. Statistically significant difference between online
shoppers and non online shoppers regarding Web 2.0 tools

 MEAN MEAN
 no. online online
Web 2.0 tool shoppers shoppers difference P value

forums 2,421927 2,828685 0,406758 0,0000
Faoebook 3,735974 3,972222 0,236249 0,0746 *
Wikipedia 2,430464 2,580000 0,149536 0,0322

Note: * significant at [alpha] = 0,1.
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