IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

The Nature of E-Loyalty in B2C E-Commerce

The Nature of E-Loyalty in B2C E-Commerce
View Sample PDF
Author(s): Daniel Tomiuk (McGill University, Canada)and Alain Pinsonneault (McGill University, Canada)
Copyright: 2002
Pages: 24
Source title: Advanced Topics in Global Information Management, Volume 1
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Felix B. Tan (Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-930708-43-3.ch022

Purchase

View The Nature of E-Loyalty in B2C E-Commerce on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

The present chapter discusses the nature of e-loyalty in B2C e-commerce. Based on previous theoretical work on loyalty in traditional commercial settings, we argue that highly affective forms of loyalty are unlikely to develop in online environments. Rather, we suggest that the e-commerce environment promotes self-sufficiency and mitigate the need for customer/employee interaction which represents a primary source of affect. Research on relationships in both social psychology and marketing suggests that this loss may not affect all customers equally. We distinguish between customers who value establishing interpersonal relationships with company employees (communally oriented) from customers who see customer/employee interactions as utilitarian and who derive little social benefits from such encounters (exchange oriented). The chapter suggests that online environments may be seen as useful by communally-oriented customers but relationally unsatisfying. Conversely, there exists a good “fit” between what exchange oriented customers value in their relationships with companies and what online environments offer. Consequently, online companies should not be surprised to find that e-loyal customers may be predominantly exchange oriented. Finally, we argue that because e-loyalty lacks a strong affective foundation, it may be less enduring than “traditional” customer loyalty. Implications of our analysis and areas for future research are discussed.

Related Content

Christian Rainero, Giuseppe Modarelli. © 2025. 26 pages.
Beatriz Maria Simões Ramos da Silva, Vicente Aguilar Nepomuceno de Oliveira, Jorge Magalhães. © 2025. 21 pages.
Ann Armstrong, Albert J. Gale. © 2025. 19 pages.
Zhi Quan, Yueyi Zhang. © 2025. 21 pages.
Sanaz Adibian. © 2025. 19 pages.
Le Ngoc Quang, Kulthida Tuamsuk. © 2025. 21 pages.
Jorge Lima de Magalhães, Carla Cristina de Freitas da Silveira, Tatiana Aragão Figueiredo, Felipe Gilio Guzzo. © 2025. 17 pages.
Body Bottom