The Effects of Presentation Format and Task
Complexity on Online Consumers' Product Understanding
Zhenhui (Jack) Jiang and Izak Benbasat
Abstract
This study assesses and compares four product presentation formats
currently used online: static pictures, videos without narration,
videos with narration, and virtual product experience (VPE), where
consumers are able to virtually feel, touch, and try product. The
effects of the four presentation formats on consumers’ product
understanding as well as the moderating role of the complexity of
product understanding tasks were examined in a laboratory
experiment.
Two constructs used to measure product understanding performance
are actual product knowledge and perceived website diagnosticity
(i.e., the extent to which consumers believe a website is helpful
for them to understand products). The experimental results show that
(1) both videos and VPE lead to higher perceived website
diagnosticity than static pictures; (2) under a moderate task
complexity condition, VPE and videos lead to the same level of
actual product knowledge, but all are more effective than static
pictures; (3) under a high task complexity condition, all four
presentation formats are equally effective in terms of actual
product knowledge. Moreover, the results also indicate that it is
perceived website diagnosticity, not actual product knowledge, that
affects the perceived usefulness of websites, which further
influences consumers’ intentions to revisit the websites.
Keywords: Product
presentation, task complexity, virtual product experience, product
understanding