The Role of Interface in Electronic Commerce: Consumer Involvement with Print Versus On-Line Catalogs
David A. Griffith, Robert F. Krampf, and Jonathan W. Palmer
International Journal of Electronic Commerce,
Volume 5, Number 4, Summer 2001, pp. 35.
Abstract: The theory of interface involvement is used to analyze the influence of physical-medium and content-presentation interfaces on consumer response. Consumer responses to print and Web-based catalog stimuli are examined. The results support interface-involvement theory, which holds that a print physical-medium interface is more effective than a Web-based physical-medium interface in stimulating consumer involvement with retailer offerings and a positive consumer response. They also indicate that media vividness and other elements of the content-presentation interface employable on a Web site stimulate higher levels of consumer involvement with retailer offerings and a more positive consumer response than a content-presentation interface of direct on-line replication of printed material. The implications for academics and practitioners are discussed.
Key Words and Phrases: Human-computer interaction, user interface.