The Impact of Individuals' Susceptibility to Persuasion on Perceived Information Quality and Purchase Intention among Millennials
Abstract
Social media is growing in popularity and has assumed a more central role in
information dissimilation more recently. This development has increased the
opportunity for firms to communicate, persuade, and influence customers' behaviors.
However, little is known about the antecedents of susceptibility to persuasion among
millennials. Millennials' are individuals born between (1982-2002) the age and have
become an important segment for marketers. Thus, this paper seeks to examine the
effect of millennials' susceptibility to persuasion on perceived information quality and
purchase intention. Precisely, the paper evaluates the effect of susceptibility to
persuasion, based on Cialdini's six persuasion dimensions, namely, reciprocity,
commitment/consistency, social proof, authority, scarcity, and liking on perceived
information quality, as well as the mediating effect of perceived information quality in
the relationship between susceptibility to persuasion on purchase intention. The results
reveal that four of the persuasion dimensions explain a significant amount of variance
in perceived information quality. Commitment/consistency, authority, scarcity, liking
and perceived information quality are significantly related. There is partial support for
the mediating effects of perceived information quality in the relationship of persuasion
dimensions with purchase intention. Also, there is partial support for the moderating
effects of gender and educational level in the relationship between persuasion dimensions and perceived information quality. The study presents key findings, and the
results provide significant theoretical and managerial implications
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/17741Collections
- Science in Marketing [26 items ]