Contactless channel for shopping and delivery in the context of social distancing in response to COVID-19 pandemic
- Authors
- Wang, Xueqin; Wong, Y.D.; Qi, Guanqiu; Yuen, Kum Fai
- Issue Date
- Jul-2021
- Publisher
- Elsevier B.V.
- Keywords
- Social distancing; Omni-channel shopping; Protection motivation theory; COVID-19 pandemic; Contactless shopping and delivery
- Citation
- Electronic Commerce Research and Applications, v.48
- Journal Title
- Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
- Volume
- 48
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/49429
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.elerap.2021.101075
- ISSN
- 1567-4223
1873-7846
- Abstract
- Arising from the global COVID-19 pandemic, social distancing has become the new norm that shapes consumers' shopping and consumption activities. In response, the contactless channel (i.e., shopping online, self-collecting and returning parcels via delivery lockers) is ideally positioned to fulfil consumers' shopping/logistics needs while avoiding all unnecessary social interactions. Thus, this study examines the factors that motivate consumers' migration to the contactless channel by viewing consumers' channel choice as both health-related and shopping behaviours. Anchored on the synthesised insights of protection motivation theory and automation acceptance theory, the conceptual framework and a series of hypotheses are proposed. A survey instrument is used for data collection, and the data are analysed using structural equation modelling. Our findings reveal that perceived channel characteristics such as compatibility and trust directly contribute to the relative value of the contactless channel; these characteristics are also correlated where trust perception reinforces compatibility perception. The channel characteristics are further influenced by consumers' perceived susceptibility of COVID19; that is, susceptibility perception enhances channel compatibility but decreases consumers' trust in the contactless channel. However, the impacts of susceptibility become insignificant with a low level of severity perception, confirming the stage-based conceptualisation of severity. Furthermore, the severity perception of COVID-19 is found to amplify the positive impacts of susceptibility perception but attenuate its negative impact. Our study promotes a deeper integration between the health and service literature and encourages more interdisciplinary studies in this nexus. Considering the practical context of social distancing, our findings suggest a struggle between compatibility perception and trust concern that shapes consumers' behaviours.
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Collections - College of Business & Economics > Department of International Logistics > 1. Journal Articles
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