E-commerce customer relationship management HICSS-38

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Publication Date

11-10-2005

Abstract

This is the fifth consecutive year for the Customer Relationship Management mini-track which was first introduced by Nicholas Romano in 2001. This year we received 15 papers and accepted 7. The first session focuses on trust ant its relationship on customers. This session has three papers leading off with a paper by Serino, Furner, and Smatt entitled "making it personal: how personalization affect trust over time." The objective of the paper is to examine trust as it applies to developing stable relationships in electronic environments. The second paper by Kim and Tadisina, "factors impacting customers' initial trust in e-business: an empirical study," investigates trust in start-up companies. The results suggest that website quality has a significant impact on customers' initial trust. The third paper by Kim and Kim is another empirical paper "a study of online transaction self-efficacy, consumer trust, and uncertainty reduction in electronic commerce transaction." This paper is one of the initial papers that have investigated self-efficacy on a consumers purchasing behavior. The second session consists of four papers that deal with models and business frameworks. The first paper by Khalifa and Shen, "effects of electronic customer relationship management on customer satisfaction: a temporal model," explores the relationship among pre-purchase, at-purchase, and post-purchase eCRM and customer satisfaction. The second paper by Brohman, Piccoli, Watson and Parasuraman, NCSS process completeness: construct development and preliminary validation," describes the results of exploratory field research on networked-based computerized information systems in regards to customer sales transactions. Boehm and Gensler, "evaluating the impact of the online sales channels on customer profitability," objective is to identify the sources of profitability differences between online and offline customers for the development of effective multi-channel management strategies. The last paper by Schubert and Hampe, "business model for mobile communities," address and develops a research framework to study mobile communities and business.

Identifier

27544474817 (Scopus)

ISBN

[0769522688]

Publication Title

Proceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences

External Full Text Location

https://doi.org/10.1109/HICSS.2005.214

ISSN

15301605

First Page

169

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