A CONCEPTUAL MODEL OF CONSUMER SATISFACTION
WITH ONLINE RESALE OUTCOMES AND PRODUCT
PERFORMANCE
Hsunchi Chu
Department of Global Marketing and Logistics, MingDao University
369 Wen-Hua Road, Peetow 52345, ChangHua, Taiwan, R.O.C.
Keywords: Consumer Online Resale, Consumer Satisfaction, C2C e-commerce.
Abstract: Consumer online resale is soaring and becoming a major venue for transactions related to second-hand
goods. Previous studies on consumer satisfaction have focused on perceived product performance or quality,
but in the extension of consumer behaviour from purchase to resale, consumer satisfaction and repurchase
intentions may also be determined by the resale outcome, rather than being limited to product performance.
Through consumer interviews conducted in Taiwan and China, this study aims to build a model consisting
of consumer satisfaction from both product performance and online resale results. The model illustrates the
antecedents of consumer resale satisfaction, and its relationships with product performance satisfaction and
the holistic consumer satisfaction. Propositions related to these concepts are also developed for discussion
and further study.
1 INTRODUCTION
The Internet has not only changed marketers’
business models, but has also dramatically expanded
consumer purchasing behaviour to an unprecedented
scope of utility and experience. The Internet
provides a convenient and efficient selling platform,
allowing consumers to sell things they no longer
need at nearly any time and in any place. Compared
to what is traded in physical retail stores and the
traditional secondary market, durable goods are
much easier to resell online. Thus, they are less
likely to be considered as big-ticket costs by
consumers who have mastered reselling items
through consumer-to-consumer (C2C) online
websites, but rather as liquid assets or accounts
recoverable (Chu and Liao, 2007). Studies of
consumer behaviour in regards to selling goals,
knowledge, and skills differ tremendously from
those on traditional consumer buying and
consumption behaviour. Why and how consumers
become resellers is an interesting issue in C2C e-
commerce research. Unfortunately, consumer online
resale behaviour has not been studied in detail. This
specific kind of consumer resale behaviour differs
from the behaviour of retailers and cannot be
analyzed from a retailer’s perspective.
For instance, consumers may feel more
comfortable financially and be more willing to
purchase high-priced products if they have skills in
using online auctions to recover part of the product
costs. In view of the prosperity of C2C e-commerce,
it is crucial to investigate the behaviour of C2C
resellers in order to elucidate the consumer resale
phenomenon more completely. Chu and Liao (2007,
2009) found that online resale intentions may
influence the purchase decisions of consumers in
many aspects. In the pre-purchase phase, consumers
with the intention to resell online may more easily
arouse a need because they perceive a lower product
price; therefore, more brands and products become
affordable. Furthermore, they may search for
different information and have different evaluations
of market preferences, such as brands providing a
longer guarantee period.
In the post-purchase phase, consumer satisfaction
with a brand may be heavily altered by the resale
result. Consumers may also be less likely to
purchase a new product if, they cannot make
“complete use” of it and, on the other hand, cannot
resell it. Consumers may feel discouraged and will
not repurchase the brands with undesirable resale
performance if the resale outcome fails to meet their
191
Chu H. (2009).
A CONCEPTUAL MODEL OF CONSUMER SATISFACTION WITH ONLINE RESALE OUTCOMES AND PRODUCT PERFORMANCE.
In Proceedings of the International Conference on e-Business, pages 191-195
DOI: 10.5220/0002173001910195
Copyright
c
SciTePress
expectations (Chu and Liao, 2007). Therefore,
repurchase intentions could be undermined by
consumer resale dissatisfaction. This deduction
provides inspiring implications for consumer
behaviour research because it illustrates that
consumers care about product quality as well as
resale results, such as the resale price or time needed
to resell items. A consumer satisfaction model
including satisfaction from both product quality and
resale results may have stronger explanatory power
for predicting consumers’ repurchase intentions. In
sum, this exploratory study aims to build a
conceptual model illustrating the antecedents of
consumer resale satisfaction, and its relationships
with product performance satisfaction and the
holistic consumer satisfaction. Propositions related
to these concepts are also developed for discussion
and further study.
2 METHODS
Consumer interviews were conducted to collect
information on consumer purchase decisions and
online resale behaviour. Through a snowballing
process, a purposeful sample of 25 participants in
Taiwan and China who had experience with
successfully selling a number of products online
took part in this study. The author of the study, who
is very familiar with C2C auction mechanisms in
Taiwan and China, interviewed the participants in
this study. Interviewees ranged in age from 19 to 42,
with an average age of 28. Novice users, those with
only one resale transaction experience, and veteran
users, those with 17,637 resale transaction
experiences, were included in the interviews. To
collect consumer online resale data in Taiwan and
China, two phases of interviews were implemented.
From April to December 2006, the first phase of
interviews was launched in Taiwan by inviting 80
students enrolled in an undergraduate marketing
class to participate. Five students with online resale
experience volunteered. Before the formal interview,
several questions were asked to check the
qualifications of these participants, and one
professional retailer who sold computer components
online was screened out. At the end of each
interview, we asked participants to nominate
qualified candidates among their friends or relatives
for our next interviews. We also requested that
participants contact the candidates they nominated to
question their willingness for an interview in
advance. We purposively avoided including more
students in our study in order to expand our sample
variety. Through the snowballing process, a total
sample of 15 participants in Taiwan joined the
interview. We then started the second phase of
interviews in February 2007 to study consumer
online resale in China. Likewise, we first asked 15
interviewees in Taiwan to invite qualified consumer
resellers in China they were acquainted with, and
requested that they get permission from their friends
by phone or email prior to the face-to-face
interviews. After contacting 15 candidates, we
selected 10 consumer resellers who had participated
in consumer resale transactions on China’s C2C
auction websites, now located in Shanghai and
Shenzhen, two of the largest cities in China. We
restricted our interviews to participants in these two
cities in order to reduce travel costs. Although the
participants from China resided in China’s major
cities at the time of the interviews, half had relocated
from less developed inland cities, and may have
shared information on online resale experiences
taking place in the smaller cities of China. The
author travelled to China to interview the 10
participants from June to August 2007.
Patton (2002) identified three basic types of
qualitative interviews for research or evaluation:
informal conversational interview, interview guide
approach, and standardized open-ended interview.
We employed the interview guide approach
considering that the main purposes of the study are
clear, and we had enough information to develop
guidelines for interviews. Intensive interviews were
conducted using a conversational, unstructured,
exploratory interview style guided by an outline in
order to explore resale motivations, product supply
sources, product conditions, pricing strategies, resale
goals, and resale satisfaction. Resellers can offer
different products for different reasons, so we asked
each participant to give several examples of
successful online resale transactions. We collected
131 resale transaction cases from the 25 participants,
with each participant providing an average of 5
resale examples. One advantage of investigating
online resale is that all transaction records are kept
in the auction system for two years, including the
messages between sellers and buyers. Interview
participants were encouraged to review the records
of their resale transactions in their accounts if they
did not remember the details of the transaction
during the interviews, which helped to improve the
accuracy of the information.
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3 CONSUMER SATISFACTION
MODEL
Consumer satisfaction is an evaluative mental state
as a result of the consumer’s comparison of
expectations prior to a purchase with performance
perceptions after a purchase (Oliver, 1980, 1993;
Westbrook, 1987). Previous studies on consumer
satisfaction have focused on perceived product
performance or quality, but in the extension of
consumer behaviour from purchase to resale,
consumer satisfaction and repurchase intentions may
also be determined by the resale outcome, rather
than being limited to product performance (Chu and
Liao, 2008). Thus, we propose a consumer
satisfaction model consisting of two parts. One part
is traditional consumer satisfaction related to
product performance, while the second is in regards
to the resale result. In the interviews, we found
related examples:
The best brand of cell phone should be the one
which performs well and can be resold at a good
price. (Vicky, Taiwan, 32 )
I am not satisfied with my used portable computer
because the resale price is much lower than other
brands. (Yang, Taiwan, 22)
These two examples expressed their concern
about resale outcomes, suggesting that the presented
model could better explain consumer satisfaction
when individuals practice secondary resale since the
traditional consumer satisfaction model does not
cover resale satisfaction, which affects consumer
behaviour. Therefore, the following propositions are
developed for discussion (please also see Figure 1).
P1a: The higher the product performance
satisfaction, the higher the consumer satisfaction.
P1b: The higher the resale satisfaction, the higher
the consumer satisfaction.
P1c: The higher the consumer satisfaction, the
higher the repurchase intention toward the item.
We also found that consumers with resale intentions
may hold expectations toward the resale results,
such as an ideal resale price or time taken to sell the
goods. Consumers may feel discouraged if the resale
outcome fails to meet expectations, and will not
repurchase the brands with undesirable resale
performance. Below are two examples:
I prefer luxury goods that provide authentic
certificates and a longer guarantee period because
that could help me resell it for a higher price. In
addition, before making each purchase decision, I
definitely check online auctions first to know which
one has a better second-hand price. (Ivy, Taiwan,
25)
Before buying high-price electronic products, I go
online first to check product information and user
comments in online communities to identify ideal
products. Then I visit stores to feel and test the
products personally. After deciding which model I
like, I compare price and service conditions to
decide where I should buy. I have no specific
preference for online or offline outlets, that depends
on the information I receive. (Tony, Taiwan, 22)
Figure 1:The Model of Consumer Satisfaction Including Consumer Resale Outcomes.
Repurchase
Intention
Consumer
Satisfaction
Product
Performance
Satisfaction
Online
Resale
Satisfaction
P1a(+)
P1c(+)
Resale Price
Disconfirmation
Resale Price
Expectation of
Resale Price
P1b(+)
P5(+)
P4(+)
P2(-)
P3(+)
A CONCEPTUAL MODEL OF CONSUMER SATISFACTION WITH ONLINE RESALE OUTCOMES AND
PRODUCT PERFORMANCE
193
The current study borrows the concept of
expectancy-disconfirmation from other consumer
satisfaction studies (Cardozo, 1965; Oliver, 1980) in
order to analyze consumer resale satisfaction, where
proposed “consumer resale disconfirmation” equals
the consumer resale expectation minus the resale
outcome. When the resale result is higher than
expectations, there is positive resale
disconfirmation; otherwise, there is negative resale
disconfirmation. A poor and painful result from the
online resale of a particular brand against
expectations might create a bad memory for that
brand, leading to negative disconfirmation (Oliver,
1980). Some examples of this are found in the
interviews:
After selling a cell phone at a very low price, I
wondered about the reason and considered not
buying the same brand next time. (Chen, Taiwan,
35)
I love the products of Louis Vuitton and Chanel, not
just the brands themselves, but they also have better
resale prices than Gucci and Prada on eBay. When
not liking a LV purse any more, I can sell it on eBay
in a week to get 70%-80% of the money back. A real
luxury good should have a better preservation value
and LVs never disappoint me. (Mary, China, 21)
Based on the interviews, we propose the following.
P2: The higher the expectation of resale price, the
lower the resale price disconfirmation.
P3: The higher the resale price, the higher the resale
price disconfirmation.
P4: The higher the resale price disconfirmation, the
higher the resale satisfaction.
Consumers may hold negative attitudes toward
brands with a low resale value. However, a
surprisingly good resale result may positively
change consumer satisfaction with certain brands.
The resale performance of a brand may be deemed
as an indicator of product value, indicated by the
secondary market responses. Thus, the resale result
might interplay with the perception of product
performance to affect consumer satisfaction with a
brand. Examples of this are derived from the
interviews:
In the beginning, I didn’t like the style of the jeans.
But I changed my mind after reselling them online
with a good price. The brand is really trendy. (Ivy,
Taiwan, 25)
I would never buy the same brand. It’s not easy to
use and, what’s worse, nobody wants to purchase it
on eBay even with a very low price. I can confirm it
is really a third rate brand. (Kevin, Taiwan, 31)
Based on these information, the following
proposition is offered for discussion.
P5: After an item is resold, the higher the resale
satisfaction, the higher the product performance
satisfaction.
4 CONCLUSIONS
The satisfaction model in this study presents a clear
picture of consumer satisfaction, showing the
antecedents and consequences of consumer resale
satisfaction. Most importantly, this study has
indicated a direction that consumer resale
satisfaction, an important factor worth more
attention, could affect product performance
satisfaction and the holistic consumer satisfaction,
providing implications to both consumer researchers
and managers. In addition, this study introduced
useful tools to analyze consumer resale satisfaction
and offers some insights regarding resale
phenomena. The model is a first step toward an
understanding of consumer online resale
satisfaction. Clearly, the first research step is to
empirically test the proposed relationships in the
model as well as the propositions. Each of the major
antecedent factors needs to be examined to ascertain
the strength and exact nature of the relationship with
consumer online resale satisfaction. We have offered
a number of propositions, calling for more attention
and devotion to this relatively unknown area of
study, especially in regards to the impacts of
consumer resale satisfaction on product performance
satisfaction and overall consumer satisfaction.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We deeply thank our six anonymous reviewers for
their insightful comments. This work was supported
by the National Science Council under Grants No.
NSC97-2410-H-451-008.
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PRODUCT PERFORMANCE
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