Perceived aggressive monetization: why some mobile gamers won’t spend any money on in-app purchases
Imam Salehudin () and
Frank Alpert ()
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Imam Salehudin: University of Indonesia
Frank Alpert: Independent Scholar
Electronic Commerce Research, 2024, vol. 24, issue 3, No 18, 1997-2019
Abstract:
Abstract What causes mobile gamers to be unwilling to spend money on in-app purchases (IAP)? This paper answers this question in two studies. The first study develops and validates the new construct of perceived aggressive monetization (PAM). The second study tests the proposed model with a total sample of 527 US and 526 Australian mobile gamers. The result shows a separate decision mechanism between conversion (i.e., to spend money or not) and the spending size (i.e., how much money to spend). PAM increases users' likelihood of spending nothing on IAP, while perceived fairness decreases that likelihood. However, neither influences how much money the users spend once they decide to spend money. The users' Willingness to Spend and the Time-spent playing the game explained both the conversion and the spending size. There is also a significant interaction between willingness to spend and self-control in explaining the size of spending.
Keywords: In-app purchases; Mobile games; Willingness to spend; Perceived fairness; Perceived aggressive monetization; Hurdle model (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1007/s10660-022-09603-2
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