An individual differences approach in adaptive waving of user checkout process in retail eCommerce
Date
2014Author

Germanakos, Panagiotis
Asimakopoulos, Stavros

Mourlas, Constantinos
Spanoudis, George
Samaras, George S.
ISSN
0302-9743Source
1st International Conference on HCI in Business, HCIB 2014 - Held as Part of 16th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, HCI International 2014Volume
8527 LNCSPages
451-460Google Scholar check
Keyword(s):
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Developing a usable checkout process is pivotal for e-business success. However, recent research has shown that users frequently abandon their shopping carts and lacking a clear direction through the process. In this context, aiming to improve the usability and overall user experience of checkout processes in ecommerce Web-sites, this paper reports on a study, primarily inspired by concepts driven from theories of individual differences in cognitive processing, and considers content presentation and navigability as a measure of checkout usability and task quality. Concurrent think-aloud, short interviews and questionnaires were conducted with a convenient sample of 15 users to understand the preference of a particular type of checkout process, and users' task completion time while interacting with ecommerce Web-sites for a set of different checkout scenarios. Preliminary results revealed that cognitive styles have an effect on users' task completion and checkout process preference. © 2014 Springer International Publishing.