Global Journal of Business Management

ISSN 2736-1721

Global Journal of Business Management ISSN 6731-4538 Vol. 6 (9), pp. 001-013, September, 2012. © International Scholars Journals

Full Length Research Paper

Exploring the impact of personality traits on online shopping behavior

Wen-Chin Tsao1,2* and Hung-Ru Chang1

1Department of Business Administration, National Chin-Yi University of Technology, No. 35, Lane 215, Sec. 1, Chung-Shan Rd., Taiping City, Taichung County, 411, Taiwan, R.O.C.

2No. 9 , Chungshan Lane, Tungchi St. , Tungshih Town, Taichung County, 423, Taiwan, R.O.C.

Accepted 15 June, 2012

Abstract

With online shops (e-stores) popping up at a rapid rate in the 21st century, brick-and-mortar stores (physical stores) are no longer the only outlet that attracts consumer spending. Compared with their physical store cousins, e-stores offer more diverse product choices, individualized products and service information, shopping convenience, and privacy. The purpose of this article is mainly to investigate the impacts of personality traits of e-shoppers on their purchase behavior. A structural equation model is developed to test the causal effects between those constructs. The empirical results show that (1) hedonic purchase motivation is positively influenced by three of the big five traits: neuroticism, extraversion, and openness to experience; (2) when consumers have higher degrees of neuroticism, agreeableness, or openness to experience, they tend to be utility-motivated to shop online; (3) utilitarian purchase motivation is a key factor that invokes the search intention in consumers while hedonic motivation is not. The managerial implications for business mangers, the limitations of this study, and further research ideas for future researchers are discussed indepth.

Key words: Personality trait, hedonic motivation, utilitarian motivation, search intention.