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Service co-creation in social media: An extension of the theory of planned behavior

Social media have become a major channel through which consumers interact with firms and other consumers. This paper examines the factors that drive consumers to co-create in social media and proposes a theoretical model that extends the theory of planned behavior to include perceived usefulness as...

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Published in:Computers in human behavior 2016-12, Vol.65, p.260-266
Main Authors: Cheung, Millissa F.Y., To, W.M.
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Language:English
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container_title Computers in human behavior
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description Social media have become a major channel through which consumers interact with firms and other consumers. This paper examines the factors that drive consumers to co-create in social media and proposes a theoretical model that extends the theory of planned behavior to include perceived usefulness as a key antecedent of consumer attitudes toward co-creation in social media. The model was tested using responses from 743 Chinese consumers. Results of structural equation modeling confirmed that perceived usefulness was an antecedent of consumer attitudes toward co-creation in social media. The relationship between perceived usefulness and customer attitudes toward co-creation was moderated by the level of consumer involvement, and that relationship was found to be more salient for a high rather than a low level of consumer involvement. Practical and theoretical implications are given. •Perceived usefulness is an antecedent of attitude toward co-creation in social media.•Perceived behavioral control, norm, and attitudes affect intention to co-create.•Intention to co-create and perceived behavioral control affect actual behavior.•Involvement moderates the relationship between perceived usefulness and attitude.•The extended theory of planned behavior explains co-creation in social media.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.chb.2016.08.031
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ispartof Computers in human behavior, 2016-12, Vol.65, p.260-266
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1873-7692
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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection
subjects Co-creation
Consumer attitudes
Consumer involvement with social media
Consumers
Customer satisfaction
Digital media
Low level
Participation
Perceived usefulness
Social media
Social networks
Studies
Theory of planned behavior
title Service co-creation in social media: An extension of the theory of planned behavior
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