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A research framework for social commerce adoption

Mahmood Hajli (Department of Management, University of London, London, UK)

Information Management & Computer Security

ISSN: 0968-5227

Article publication date: 12 July 2013

8900

Abstract

Purpose

Social relationships on the internet through the emergence of Web 2.0 applications created new opportunities for business. This is mainly because of the growth of social networking sites, which has also developed e‐commerce. The current development in e‐commerce opened a new stream, entitled social commerce, which is using social technologies to create an environment for generating social interactions. These social interactions can drive online social support in e‐commerce, which in turn is creating trust and an increased intention to use social commerce.

Design/methodology/approach

This research used social support theory and related theories on intention to use to propose a theoretical framework for the adoption of social commerce.

Findings

The model predicts that forums and communities, ratings, reviews, referrals and recommendations are helping to introduce new business plans for e‐vendors. The model also shows trust is an on‐going issue in e‐commerce and can be built through social commerce constructs.

Research limitations/implications

There is limited research in the area of social commerce which this study seeks to redress. This study proposes a new model which can be extended by other constructs. However, the research needs to empirically test the constructs of the proposed model and their relationship.

Originality/value

This paper introduces social commerce constructs, namely; recommendations and referrals, forums and communities and rating and reviews. The bases of the model proposed in this research are IT adoption and literature in the area such as PU and intention to buy or trust. These highlight the key role of ICT in the behaviour of online customers. This can be a development for e‐commerce adoption models and the results signify that IS has a reference discipline for the behaviour of online consumers. This is an issue in marketing where not enough attention is paid to the importance of IT and IS.

Keywords

Citation

Hajli, M. (2013), "A research framework for social commerce adoption", Information Management & Computer Security, Vol. 21 No. 3, pp. 144-154. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMCS-04-2012-0024

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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