Context-general and context-specific determinants of online satisfaction and loyalty for commerce and content sites
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Date
2012-09-07Author
Jaiswal, Anand Kumar
Niraj, Rakesh
Venugopal, Pingali
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We use the context-general and context-specific factor approach to examine the generalizability of satisfaction and loyalty models across two
disparate online contexts—online retailing and content site browsing. Our conceptual models include the moderating effects of user-characteristic
Web expertise, besides main effects of Web site factors and Web expertise. Results indicate that satisfaction and loyalty judgments are sensitive to
both context-general and context-specific determinants, as well as to some interactions between them. Among context-general determinants, ease
of use and customer service are positively related to satisfaction, Web community to loyalty, and Web expertise to both satisfaction and loyalty.
Flow, a context-specific determinant, has a significant positive effect on satisfaction alone; security affects loyalty alone; and fulfillment/reliability
and information quality are significant predictors of both satisfaction and loyalty. The results show that Web expertise moderates the effect of ease
of use on satisfaction. The study contributes to marketing theory and practice by identifying satisfaction and loyalty mechanisms that are
potentially generalizable across the two online contexts and providing a guiding framework for simultaneous consideration of context-specific and
context-general factors in future research.
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