IIM Ranchi Journal of Management Studies (Mar 2022)

From offline shopping to online shopping in Nigeria: evidence from African emerging economy

  • Ambrose Ogbonna Oloveze,
  • Chinweike Ogbonna,
  • Emmanuel Ahaiwe,
  • Paschal Anayochukwu Ugwu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1108/IRJMS-08-2021-0110
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 55 – 68

Abstract

Read online

Purpose – The study builds on studies in online shopping. Existing studies in online shopping proved that it is an attraction to shoppers. In Nigeria's emerging economy the increasing Internet penetration does not equate with intention to use online shopping because it is not really used by users for online shopping. Consumers are considering it unattractive because of serious concerns that border on product quality of online shops and poor know-how on e-tech. The study sought to explore factors that could mitigate challenges to successful online shopping in Nigeria's emerging economy. Design/methodology/approach – Online survey method was used to sample 246 respondents. Measurement items were adapted from related literature. Confirmatory factor analysis and content validity were used to check the reliability and validity. A set of fit indices were used to check the goodness of fit. Data was analysed using structural equation model. Findings – Results indicate direct effects of consumer attitude, perceived usefulness and social influence on intention to use online shopping with consumer attitude shown to have a greater degree of importance towards intention to use online shopping. Thus, consumers' attitude of browsing online and going offline for purchases is dependent on attitude of like or dislike. Perceived ease of use, social influence and perceived usefulness had an indirect positive effect on consumer attitude to intention to use online shopping. Social influence is indicated to have a direct positive effect on perceived ease of use. Also perceived ease of use had a positive and direct effect on perceived usefulness. Research limitations/implications – The sample size is not large enough and the use of snowball sampling limits representativeness. Practical implications – The study indicated vital factors African emerging economies like Nigeria can use to improve consumer confidence towards intention to use online shopping and drive cashless policies. Several studies have missed the indirect effect of referents (social influence) on adoption of technology. The study proved that it can produce indirect effect as well as direct effect on intention to use online shopping. Originality/value – Several studies have missed the indirect effect of referents (social influence) on adoption of technology. The study proved that it can produce indirect effect as well as direct effect on online shopping.

Keywords