KOREASCHOLAR

THE EFFECT OF SHOPPING PRODUCTIVITY WITH A SMARTPHONE ON VALUE CO-CREATION AND CUSTOMER EQUITY

Nam Hee Jin, Kyong Ryul Koo, Kyung Hoon Kim
  • LanguageENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/351340
Global Marketing Conference
2018 Global Marketing Conference at Tokyo (2018.07)
p.717
글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 (Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations)
Abstract

Mobile shopping motivations affects the interaction between mobile shoppers and mobile retailers. This study examines how mobile shopping motivations affect value co-creation, customer equity drivers, and customer lifetime value through a structural equation model. Mobile shopping motivations as mobile shoppers’ needs are time saving, right purchase and money saving. To meet mobile shoppers’ needs, mobile shoppers, mobile retailers, and other customers are willing to collaborate. Value co-creation that Yi and Gong (2013) scaled includes customer participation behaviour such as information seeking, information sharing, responsible behaviour, and personal interaction, and customer citizenship behaviour such as feedback, helping, advocacy, and tolerance. The results indicate that mobile shopping motivations are significant determinants of value co-creation behaviours, implying that mobile shopping motivations are driving factors of value co-creation. Customer participation behaviour has significant effects on value equity and brand equity while customer citizenship behaviour shows positive effects on brand equity and relationship. As for customer lifetime value, relationship equity has significant positive effect, while value and brand equity had no significant influence. This study also shows that mobile shopping motivations affect both value equity and relationship equity of mobile shopping apps by improving information sharing, responsible behaviour, and personal interaction, feedback, helping, and advocacy. Value equity and relationship equity also have significant effects on customer lifetime value. The authors discuss the theoretical and managerial implications for their findings.

Author
  • Nam Hee Jin(Changwon National University, Republic of Korea)
  • Kyong Ryul Koo(Changwon National University, Republic of Korea)
  • Kyung Hoon Kim(Changwon National University, Republic of Korea)