IS

Awad, Naveen Farag

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.326 personalization content personalized willingness web pay online likelihood information consumers cues customers consumer services elaboration
0.132 perceived transparency control design enjoyment experience study diagnosticity improve features develop consequences showing user experiential
0.123 privacy information concerns individuals personal disclosure protection concern consumers practices control data private calculus regulation
0.115 information systems paper use design case important used context provide presented authors concepts order number

Focal Researcher     Coauthors of Focal Researcher (1st degree)     Coauthors of Coauthors (2nd degree)

Note: click on a node to go to a researcher's profile page. Drag a node to reallocate. Number on the edge is the number of co-authorships.

Krishnan, M. S. 1
business value of information systems 1 consumer privacy 1 empirical studies of information systems 1 information sharing practices. 1
information transparency 1 online experience 1 online information sharing 1 online personalization 1
Online privacy 1 Web site features 1

Articles (1)

THE PERSONALIZATION PRIVACY PARADOX: AN EMPIRICAL EVALUATION OF INFORMATION TRANSPARENCY AND THE WILLINGNESS TO BE PROFILED ONLINE FOR PERSONALIZATION. (MIS Quarterly, 2006)
Authors: Abstract:
    Firms today use information about customers to improve service and design personalized offerings. To do this successfully, however, firms must collect consumer information. This study enhances awareness about a central paradox for firms investing in personalization; namely, that consumers who value information transparency are also less likely to participate in personalization. We examine the relationship between information technology features, specifically information transparency features, and consumer willingness to share information for online personalization. Based on a survey of over 400 online consumers, we examine the question of whether customer perceived information transparency is associated with consumer willingness to be profiled online. Our results indicate that customers who desire greater information transparency are less willing to be profiled. This result poses a dilemma for firms, as the consumers that value information transparency features most are also the consumers who are less willing to be profiled online. In order to manage this dilemma, we suggest that firms adopt a strategy of providing features that address the needs of consumers who are more willing to partake in personalization, therefore accepting that the privacy sensitive minority of consumers are unwilling to participate in personalization, despite additional privacy features.