What is it about?
This paper empirically examines the effects of critical determinants such as universal access, satisfaction, reputation, and familiarity have on purchase intentions for wearable devices through a paradigm of trust and social benefit. Data was collected from an online survey system. The formal questionnaire consisted of two sections. The first section measured respondent perceptions of each construct in the research model. The second section interpreted the basic personal data of respondents. The study results indicate that both trust and social benefit can positively influence purchase intention for wearable devices. Universal access and familiarity fail to influence trust directly but can influence purchase intention by way of social benefit as expected. The research extends existing purchase intention literature for wearable devices by identifying the importance of universal access, context-awareness, reputation, and familiarity, and by probing the relationship of trust, social benefit, and purchase intention.
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Why is it important?
The results suggest prescriptive strategies for sellers of wearable devices.
Perspectives
It adopted TAM as the research model.
Dawei Liu
Hangzhou Dianzi University
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This page is a summary of: Can trust and social benefit really help? Empirical examination of purchase intentions for wearable devices, Information Development, July 2016, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0266666916635724.
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