Cultural, national, and industrial differences in B2B Web site design and content

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_C79C0AB40DF1
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Cultural, national, and industrial differences in B2B Web site design and content
Journal
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Author(s)
Usunier  J.-C., Roulin  N., Ivens  B.S.
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2009
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
14
Number
2
Pages
41-87
Language
english
Abstract
Web sites are a major instrument for companies to transmit information to
customers and conduct transactions in business markets. Differences in Web site design
and content across companies can be explained by cultural factors (mainly high- or
low-context communication, individualism, and power distance), characteristics of a company's
home country, and corporate demographics. Based on a review of recent studies,
mostly in B2C settings, this paper summarizes what is known about the impact of cultural
dimensions on Web site design and content. Content analysis of 600 B2B Web sites in 57
countries confirms the interrelatedness of certain antecedent variables with Web site design
and content. Some cultural orientations, especially high-context communication, may be
detrimental to the design of Web sites, making them less clear, less attractive, and less
interactive. Companies in countries characterized either by high-context communication,
collectivism, or high power distance should strive for cultural adaptation of Web sites. Firm
size and R&D intensity also have an impact on Web site design and content.
Keywords
Business-to-business, communication, content analysis, country of origin, culture, Web sites
Create date
31/10/2011 17:14
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:42
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