Consumer Repurchase Behaviors of Smartphones
Literature Review
Intention to Repurchase
Researchers
give a great deal of attention to consumer
intentions to repurchase.
Henkel et al. concluded that satisfied
consumers have increased
service usage levels and increased intentions of
future usage;
moreover, while examining the importance of
satisfaction, Cronin,
Brady, and Hult discovered that consumer
satisfaction and
repurchase intentions can be increased by offering
added value and
quality services. Repurchasing and the factors
that influence it were investigated by many scholars.
Repurchasing behavior is defined as a consumer's
actual behavior of
purchasing the same product or service on more than
one occasion. The
majority of consumer purchases are repeat purchases.
Consumers often repeatedly buy similar products from
similar sellers,
and most purchases represent a series of events
rather than a single
isolated event. Retention is another common term for
repurchase, which is considered to be one of the most
important variables in relationship marketing.
Repurchase is the actual behavior of the consumer;
however, intention
to repurchase is defined as the consumer's decision
to participate in
future activities.
Factors Assumed to Affect the Intention to Repurchase
It
can be inferred that keeping existing consumers is more important than
attracting new consumers in a competitive environment such as the
smartphone market. Most marketing research focuses on consumer
satisfaction and consumer intention to use products and services, with
the assumption that consumer satisfaction indicates repurchase. However,
it is essential to study a variety of consumer behaviors in order to
more comprehensively understand consumer repurchase behaviors;
therefore, it is necessary to examine factors that deviate from consumer
satisfaction-centered repurchasing research. Thus, this study analyzes
other factors affecting intention to repurchase.
Consumer Satisfaction
Oliver found that consumer satisfaction differs from the joy experienced when purchasing products or services,
and their expectations were anticipated to be better than their
experiences. In addition, the study found that consumer satisfaction is
reflected in the evaluation of one's emotions about a product or
service. Rust, Zahorik, and Keiningham showed that consumer
satisfaction (a consumer's willingness to revisit or recommend) has a
strong impact on loyalty.
They also found that consumer satisfaction is influenced by various
aspects (product, service quality, store attributes, and corporate
marketing activities). Wen et al. suggested that satisfaction
positively affects online repurchase intention.
Social Influence
Social
influence is regarded as a critical element in
decision-making by
people in sociology and in behavioral science. In
this study, social
influence refers to the extent to which people's
social networks
influence their behaviors - i.e., the ways in
which a person's beliefs, attitudes, thoughts, and actions change as a
result of their social interactions. This definition is rooted in
social influence theory.
The TRA
suggests that a person's behavioral intentions depend on their attitude
toward the behavior, along with other subjective norms. A subjective
norm is the influence had by the people in one's social environment on
one's behavioral intentions (i.e., the perception of whether people who
are important to them think that they should perform the behavior in
question). The concept of subjective norms greatly influenced the
formation of the measures of social influence in these two models, as
well as many other studies. Venkatesh and Davis believed that, in
voluntary settings, social influences are more likely to operate
indirectly through utilitarian outcomes.
Currently,
word of mouth - a form of social influence - as a marketing communication
strategy is famous and globally characterized as a cost-effective and
persuasive promotional tool.
Emotional Loyalty
Law, Hui, and Zhao
used Oliver's definition of loyalty as "a deeply held commitment to
rebuy or repatronize a preferred product/service consistently in the
future, thereby causing repetitive same-brand or same-brand-set
purchasing, despite situational influences and marketing efforts having
the potential to cause switching behavior". In other words, they viewed
loyalty as a consumer attitude rather than a consumer behavior.
Behavioral loyalty is solely viewed as a repurchase of the product or
service. Dixon et al. found that loyal consumers are expected to
consistently repurchase despite competitive efforts.
Emotional loyalty is the ultimate type of loyalty, in which consumers
choose a particular brand because they have a personal connection with
the brand, regardless of price, convenience, or other external factors.
Attractive looks, novel materials, and atypical design technology bring
positive emotions to consumers, thereby providing emotional value to
them.
Arruda-Filho et al. recruited
iPhone users for interviews and conducted a
netnographic analysis that
showed consumers may experience social value due to
the possession and
use of smartphones. They found that consumers
may think of iPhone ownership as a symbol of luxury and high social
status.
In addition, sharing the experience of using
smartphones also helps
consumer interpersonal relationships. When consumers
perceive higher
social value from a product/brand, they show greater
brand loyalty
behaviors, such as disseminating positive
information and paying premium
prices.
Pihlström and Brush revealed that, when
consumers perceive
greater emotional value in a product/brand, they
show more brand
loyalty - as measured by repurchase intentions,
willingness to pay, and
positive word of mouth.
Habit
Because
repetition is a central feature of everyday life,
habit research is
important for understanding consumer behaviors.
Approximately 45% of
people's behaviors are repeated almost daily,
usually in the same
context. Chiu et al. and Limayem and
Cheung found that consumers tend to purchase products habitually.
Studies
by Anderson and Sullivan and Jones and Sasser emphasized
the need for extensive research on repurchase intentions.
In particular, research on consumer psychology actively seeks to secure
long-term competitive advantages through favorable relationships
between companies and consumers. In a number of previous studies,
researchers suggested that, when consumer satisfaction (consumer
empirical performance) increases with superior quality of products and
services, consumers are more willing to return for purchase. Therefore,
companies can expect to increase their sales and establish a sound
consumer base by getting consumers to repurchase. Despite the importance
of the intention to repurchase, most research focuses on consumer
satisfaction, only one factor of that intent.