信息隐私关切、程序公平与非个人信任:一项实证研究

Information Privacy Concerns, Procedural Fairness, and Impersonal Trust: An Empirical Investigation

ORGANIZATION SCIENCE · 1999
被引 1815 · 同刊同年前 9%
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究通过实证发现,当企业明确告知消费者采用公平信息实践时,隐私关切不再影响消费者是否愿意被建立消费档案,表明程序公平能缓解隐私担忧并促进客户留存。

Abstract

This research addresses the tensions that arise between the collection and use of personal information that people provide in the course of most consumer transactions, and privacy. In today's electronic world, the competitive strategies of successful firms increasingly depend on vast amounts of customer data. Ironically, the same information practices that provide value to organizations also raise privacy concerns for individuals. This study hypothesized that organizations can address these privacy concerns and gain business advantage through customer retention by observing procedural fairness: customers will be willing to disclose personal information and have that information subsequently used to create consumer profiles for business use when there are fair procedures in place to protect individual privacy. Because customer relationships are characterized by social distance, customers must depend on strangers to act on their behalf. Procedural fairness serves as an intermediary to build trust when interchangeable organizational agents exercise considerable delegated power on behalf of customers who cannot specify or constrain their behavior. Our hypothesis was supported as we found that when customers are explicitly told that fair information practices are employed, privacy concerns do not distinguish consumers who are willing to be profiled from those who are unwilling to have their personal information used in this way.

消费者隐私信息隐私程序公平信任客户关系