Effect of Presentation Flaw Attribution on Website Quality, Trust, and Abandonment

Authors

  • Andrea Everard
  • Scott McCoy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3127/ajis.v16i2.516

Keywords:

E-Commerce, Trust, Attribution theory, Presentation Flaws, Scenario-based experiments, Human-computer interaction, HCI

Abstract

Using scenario-based experiments we examine how users’ perceptions of online store quality and trustworthiness are affected by their attribution of website flaws. The attribution of online store website flaws can be internal (i.e., an action taken by the online store's site developer) or external (i.e., an action taken on the part of the site’s service provider) to the website. Perceived quality of the online store was found to be lower for users who attributed the flaws to internal factors. Findings also showed that the presence of a flaw, regardless of whether it was attributed to an internal or external condition, negatively affected the users’ level of trust in the website

Downloads

Published

2010-03-01

How to Cite

Everard, A., & McCoy, S. (2010). Effect of Presentation Flaw Attribution on Website Quality, Trust, and Abandonment. Australasian Journal of Information Systems, 16(2). https://doi.org/10.3127/ajis.v16i2.516