2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.techfore.2010.01.011
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The effect of reducing risk and improving personal motivation on the adoption of knowledge repository system

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Cited by 39 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…Consequently, in the online environment, it is expected that attitude facilitate transactions and reduce the barriers to the adoption of the terms of trade (Pavlou, 2002a,b), and more specifically, in our case, favour the intention to use mobile payment systems (Schierz, Schilke, & Wirtz, 2010). In line with previous research (Tsai, Zhu, Ho, & Wu, 2010;Yoon & Kim, 2013), we propose a similar relationship in the case of the new systems of payment. This results in the following hypothesis:…”
Section: Attitudesupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Consequently, in the online environment, it is expected that attitude facilitate transactions and reduce the barriers to the adoption of the terms of trade (Pavlou, 2002a,b), and more specifically, in our case, favour the intention to use mobile payment systems (Schierz, Schilke, & Wirtz, 2010). In line with previous research (Tsai, Zhu, Ho, & Wu, 2010;Yoon & Kim, 2013), we propose a similar relationship in the case of the new systems of payment. This results in the following hypothesis:…”
Section: Attitudesupporting
confidence: 85%
“…From a CRM perspective, knowledge can be understood as what has been already learned from experience or the empirical study of consumer data (Sin et al, 2005). Many healthcare institutions in Taiwan have started to emphasise the importance of knowledge management in their CRM process (Tsai, Zhu, Ho, & Wu, 2010). In addition, the key facets of knowledge management were seen to include knowledge learning and generation, knowledge dissemination and sharing, and knowledge responsiveness.…”
Section: Crm Implementation In Taiwanese Nursing Homesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perceived risk is the consumer's subjective expectation of suffering a loss in pursuit of the desired outcome (Featherman and Pavlou, 2003). Privacy and loss from transaction inaccuracy are also the elements of perceived risk (Tsai et al, 2010). Therefore, we choose the only trust and perceived risk as constructs in the research model.…”
Section: H3 Perceived Compatibility Has a Positive Effect On Consumementioning
confidence: 99%