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Beyond the adoption/ non-adoption dichotomy: the impact of innovation characteristics on potential adopters' transition through adoption process stages

R.T. Frambach, M.K. Agarwal and E.J. Nijssen
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R.T. Frambach: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Faculteit der Economische Wetenschappen en Econometrie (Free University Amsterdam, Faculty of Economics Sciences, Business Administration and Economitrics

No 6, Serie Research Memoranda from VU University Amsterdam, Faculty of Economics, Business Administration and Econometrics

Abstract: Research on innovation adoption has suffered from a bias towards understanding the factors that affect the dichotomous adoption/non-adoption decision. Much less attention is devoted to the question why potential adopters fail to progress to the adoption stage from earlier stages in the decision making process. Such knowledge is essential to understand what factors actually underlie the non-adoption of an innovation. As perceived innovation characteristics have been found to influence adoption in a substantial way, we develop hypotheses on their influence not only with respect to the adoption stage, but with respect to previous stages of the adoption process as well. Specifically, we develop hypotheses on the perceived levels and importance of relative advantage, compatibility, complexity and perceived risk in the awareness, evaluation, and adoption stages of the innovation adoption process. The hypotheses are tested using both multivariate analysis of variance and multinomial logit modeling on a sample of 242 organizations, focusing on the adoption process of electronic banking. The results show that the levels of perceived relative advantage and compatibility increase over the stages of the adoption process, whereas the perceived levels of complexity and risk largely decrease. The influence of the characteristics across the adoption stages shows that positive beliefs related to the innovation have highest salience in the initial stage of the process, whereas the salience of perceived complexity - generally considered an undesirable attribute - is highest in the final stage. In sum, our results imply that non-adopters are affected by innovation characteristics in a different way, depending on their stage in the adoption process, and therefore should not be considered as one homogeneous group of "potential adopters". These findings have important implications for marketing innovations.

JEL-codes: L15 M30 O33 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2002
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