TY - JOUR
T1 - How increased social presence through co-browsing influences user engagement in collaborative online shopping
AU - Wei, Jie
AU - Seedorf, Stefan
AU - Lowry, Paul Benjamin
AU - Thum, Christian
AU - Schulze, Thimo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017
PY - 2017/7
Y1 - 2017/7
N2 - Traditional online shopping has been a solitary activity, but technology advances are challenging this norm. Collaborative online shopping (i.e., co-shopping) stimulates more purchases than solo shopping does, and it embraces the innate human need to socialize. Thus, it represents a growing form of ecommerce and therefore draws increasing interest from researchers and practitioners. The most recent advancement in co-shopping is the emergence of social co-browsing that enables two or more users to share the same view in a browser in real time. Most existing studies on co-shopping have focused on factors that influence purchasing online, but they have not considered co-browsing. In this paper, we use social presence and engagement theories to explain the roles of co-presence and engagement in increasing endurability for co-shoppers. We tested our model with a free-simulation experiment on 234 consumers on Mechanical Turk, randomized to three conditions of co-presence. Their task involved co-browsing (except for the control condition) on an e-commerce website to shop for Apple products. To invoke the co-browsing IT artifacts, we used Synchronite as a backend to create a queue in which participants were paired in dyads. According to our results, users who perceived greater psychological presence of another shopper were significantly more engaged in the online shopping activity. In particular, co-presence in co-browsing fostered a more rewarding experience than in the chat-only condition. Finally, we outline our contributions to research and practice and discuss the limitations of this work that open up new research opportunities.
AB - Traditional online shopping has been a solitary activity, but technology advances are challenging this norm. Collaborative online shopping (i.e., co-shopping) stimulates more purchases than solo shopping does, and it embraces the innate human need to socialize. Thus, it represents a growing form of ecommerce and therefore draws increasing interest from researchers and practitioners. The most recent advancement in co-shopping is the emergence of social co-browsing that enables two or more users to share the same view in a browser in real time. Most existing studies on co-shopping have focused on factors that influence purchasing online, but they have not considered co-browsing. In this paper, we use social presence and engagement theories to explain the roles of co-presence and engagement in increasing endurability for co-shoppers. We tested our model with a free-simulation experiment on 234 consumers on Mechanical Turk, randomized to three conditions of co-presence. Their task involved co-browsing (except for the control condition) on an e-commerce website to shop for Apple products. To invoke the co-browsing IT artifacts, we used Synchronite as a backend to create a queue in which participants were paired in dyads. According to our results, users who perceived greater psychological presence of another shopper were significantly more engaged in the online shopping activity. In particular, co-presence in co-browsing fostered a more rewarding experience than in the chat-only condition. Finally, we outline our contributions to research and practice and discuss the limitations of this work that open up new research opportunities.
KW - Co-browsing
KW - Co-presence
KW - Collaboration
KW - E-commerce
KW - Online shopping
KW - Social presence
KW - Social presence theory
KW - User engagement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85024928270&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.elerap.2017.07.002
DO - 10.1016/j.elerap.2017.07.002
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85024928270
SN - 1567-4223
VL - 24
SP - 84
EP - 99
JO - Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
JF - Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
ER -