MISQ Archivist
Understanding and Mitigating Uncertainty in
Online Exchange Relationships: A Principal-Agent Perspective
Paul A. Pavlou, Huigang Liang, and
Yajiong Xue
Abstract
Despite a decade since the inception
of B2C e-commerce, the uncertainty of the online environment still
makes many consumers reluctant to engage in
online exchange relationships.
Even if uncertainty has been
widely touted as the primary barrier to
online transactions, the literature has viewed uncertainty as a
“background” mediator with insufficient conceptualization and
measurement. To better understand the nature of uncertainty and
mitigate its potentially harmful effects on B2C e-commerce adoption
(especially for important purchases), this study draws upon and
extends the principal-agent perspective to identify and propose a
set of four antecedents of perceived uncertainty in online
buyer-seller relationships – perceived information asymmetry, fears
of seller opportunism, information privacy concerns, and information
security concerns - which are drawn from the agency problems of
adverse selection (hidden information) and moral hazard (hidden
action).
To mitigate uncertainty in online
exchange relationships, this study
builds upon the principal-agent
perspective to propose a set of four uncertainty mitigating factors
–
trust, website informativeness,
product diagnosticity, and social presence - that facilitate online
exchange relationships by overcoming the agency problems of hidden
information and hidden action through the logic of signals and
incentives.
The proposed structural model is
empirically tested with longitudinal data from 521 consumers for two
products (prescription drugs and books) that differ on their level
of purchase involvement. The results support our model, delineating
the process by which buyers engage in online exchange relationships
by mitigating uncertainty. Interestingly, the proposed model is
validated for two distinct targets, a specific website and a class
of websites.
Implications for understanding and
facilitating online exchange relationships for different types of
purchases, mitigating uncertainty perceptions, and extending the
principal-agent perspective are discussed.
Keywords: Uncertainty, agency theory, adverse selection, hidden information,
moral hazard, hidden action, fears of seller opportunism,
information asymmetry, information privacy, information security,
trust, website informativeness, product diagnosticity, social
presence, book purchasing, online prescription filling.