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The Dimensions of Web Site Credibility and Their Relation to Active Trust and Behavioural Impact
Author(s) -
Brian Cugelman,
Mike Thelwall,
Phil Dawes
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
communications of the association for information systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.576
H-Index - 48
ISSN - 1529-3181
DOI - 10.17705/1cais.02426
Subject(s) - credibility , psychological intervention , construct (python library) , structural equation modeling , the internet , relation (database) , web site , social marketing , psychology , social psychology , public relations , political science , computer science , world wide web , database , law , machine learning , psychiatry , programming language
This paper discusses two trends that threaten to undermine the effectiveness of online social marketing interventions: growing mistrust and competition. As a solution, this paper examines the relationships between Web site credibility, target audiences’ active trust and behaviour. Using structural equation modelling to evaluate two credibility models, this study concludes that Web site credibility is best considered a three-dimensional construct composed of expertise, trustworthiness and visual appeal, and that trust plays a partial mediating role between Web site credibility and behavioural impacts. The paper examines theoretical implications of conceptualizing Web sites according to a human credibility model, and factoring trust into Internet-based behavioural change interventions. Practical guidelines suggest ways to address these findings when planning online social marketing interventions.

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