Consumers show increasing levels of concern regarding disclosing information to companies, as retailers’ access to their personal information heightenstheir feelings of vulnerability. Although customers’ personal information is crucial for targeting actual and potential customers, the extant discussion regarding the determinants of customers’ willingness to disclose personal information is limited. Drawing upon social judgment theory, this study investigates how consumers experience different levels of perceived warmth, which alleviates privacy concerns and, in turn, affects their willingness to disclose personal information during different stages of the online customer purchase journey. A mixed-method design combining a focus group (Study 1), an online experiment, a field study and a laboratory experiment (Studies 2, 3 and 4) provide a multifaceted representation of this phenomenon. The results show that compared to the prepurchase phase, asking for personal information at the end of the online customer purchase journey (i.e., purchase and postpurchase phases) leads to a higher perception of warmth and lower privacy concerns, thereby increasing customers’ disclosure of personal data. The findings are robust to consumers’ brand familiarity and other relevant sociodemographic variables. This research provides insightful theoretical and practical implications for retailers regarding how to enhance perceived warmth and improve customers’ willingness to disclose personal information
Customers’ Willingness to Disclose Personal Information throughout theCustomer Purchase Journey in Retailing: The Role of Perceived Warmth / Gaetano Aiello; Raffaele Donvito; Diletta Acuti; Laura Grazzini; Valentina Mazzoli; Virginia Vannucci; Giampaolo Viglia. - In: JOURNAL OF RETAILING. - ISSN 0022-4359. - ELETTRONICO. - 96:(2020), pp. 490-506. [10.1016/j.jretai.2020.07.001]
Customers’ Willingness to Disclose Personal Information throughout theCustomer Purchase Journey in Retailing: The Role of Perceived Warmth
Gaetano Aiello;Raffaele Donvito;Diletta Acuti;Laura Grazzini;Valentina Mazzoli;Virginia Vannucci;
2020
Abstract
Consumers show increasing levels of concern regarding disclosing information to companies, as retailers’ access to their personal information heightenstheir feelings of vulnerability. Although customers’ personal information is crucial for targeting actual and potential customers, the extant discussion regarding the determinants of customers’ willingness to disclose personal information is limited. Drawing upon social judgment theory, this study investigates how consumers experience different levels of perceived warmth, which alleviates privacy concerns and, in turn, affects their willingness to disclose personal information during different stages of the online customer purchase journey. A mixed-method design combining a focus group (Study 1), an online experiment, a field study and a laboratory experiment (Studies 2, 3 and 4) provide a multifaceted representation of this phenomenon. The results show that compared to the prepurchase phase, asking for personal information at the end of the online customer purchase journey (i.e., purchase and postpurchase phases) leads to a higher perception of warmth and lower privacy concerns, thereby increasing customers’ disclosure of personal data. The findings are robust to consumers’ brand familiarity and other relevant sociodemographic variables. This research provides insightful theoretical and practical implications for retailers regarding how to enhance perceived warmth and improve customers’ willingness to disclose personal informationFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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