@article{76543, title = {Cultural Impact on the design of ecommerce websites}, author = {Panqun Gong and Bruce W. N. Lo}, year = 2006, description = {- design of ecommerce websites - impact of culture}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/267a67f22344da11af574ee37139d8074/free2fail}, keywords = {china culture ecommerce} } @article{4, title = {Cultural Transmission and the Diffusion of Innovations: Adoption Dynamics Indicate That Biased Cultural Transmission Is the Predominate Force in Behavioral Change}, author = {Joseph Henrich}, journal = {American Anthropologist}, number = 4, pages = {992-1013}, volume = 103, year = 2001, url = {http://www.anthrosource.net/doi/abs/10.1525/aa.2001.103.4.992}, doi = {10.1525/aa.2001.103.4.992}, eprint = {http://www.anthrosource.net/doi/pdf/10.1525/aa.2001.103.4.992}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2d41b5aa6d03a885a6f0c27bd7863ead8/free2fail}, keywords = {innovationDIFFUSION culturalTRANSMISSION culture} } @article{keyhere, title = {Consumer trust in e-commerce in the United States, Singapore and China}, author = {Thompson S.H. Teo and Jing Liu}, journal = {Omega}, month = {#feb#}, number = 1, pages = {22--38}, volume = 35, year = 2007, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VC4-4FSK7K8-1/2/2243a52e8a38979b446f577ccc3d2e3f}, description = {ScienceDirect - Omega : Consumer trust in e-commerce in the United States, Singapore and China}, abstract = {This study examines the antecedents and consequences of consumer trust in the United States, Singapore and China. The results show that reputation and system assurance of an Internet vendor and consumers' propensity to trust are positively related to consumer trust. Consumers' trust has a positive relationship with attitude and a negative relationship with perceived risk. Implications of the results are discussed.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/259a98a341897d579bd47fdea852405a6/free2fail}, keywords = {webSURVEY empirical ecommerce china trust culture} } @article{keyhere, title = {Chinese culture and e-commerce: an exploratory study}, author = {Alev M. Efendioglu and Vincent F. Yip}, journal = {Interacting with Computers}, month = {#feb#}, number = 1, pages = {45--62}, volume = 16, year = 2004, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V0D-4B6CTTM-1/2/81e4c138c56eacb0e2f039dfcff0cb1c}, description = {- discusses adoption of ecommerce in china in the context of cultural differences}, abstract = {Differing characteristics of local environments, both infrastructural and socio-economic, have created a significant level of variation in the acceptance and growth of e-commerce in different regions of the world. This paper focuses on the impact of these infrastructural and socio-economic factors on e-commerce development in China. The findings provide insights into the role of culture in e-commerce, and the factors that may impact a broader acceptance and development of e-commerce in China. In this paper, we present and discuss our findings, and identify changes that will be required for broader acceptance and diffusion of e-commerce in China. Cultural issues such as `socializing effect of commerce', `transactional and institutional trust', and `attitudes toward debt' were determined to be the major impediments to e-commerce in China. However, our research also shows that, even though their means for payment are different, the most enlightened, able, and sophisticated consumers in China participate in e-commerce in the same frequencies as the mainstream e-commerce consumers in the US.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2e2a99a79d5244f17d2f9f56b3daaad63/free2fail}, keywords = {userBEHAVIOR culture adoption ecommerce china} } @article{1243858, title = {Business-to-business adoption of eCommerce in China}, address = {Amsterdam, The Netherlands, The Netherlands}, author = {Jing Tan and Katherine Tyler and Andrea Manica}, journal = {Inf. Manage.}, number = 3, pages = {332--351}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers B. V.}, volume = 44, year = 2007, url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1243858}, issn = {0378-7206}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.im.2007.04.001}, description = {Business-to-business adoption of eCommerce in China}, abstract = {There is an absence of research on business-to-business eCommerce in developing countries which covers wide-ranging issues beyond contextual imperatives. This paper analyzes eCommerce adoption by businesses in China from internal, external and contextual perspectives. The contributions of this paper are to extend and adapt the Perceived eReadiness Model [A. Molla, P.S. Licker, eCommerce adoption in developing countries: a model and instrument, Information & Management (42) 2005, pp. 877-899; A. Molla, P.S. Licker, Perceived E-Readiness factors in e-Commerce adoption: an empirical investigation in a developing country, International Journal of Electronic Commerce 10(1), 2005, pp. 83-110] to eCommerce in China in an empirical study of 134 Chinese SME's. This study validates the Perceived eReadiness Model [53,54]. It further analyzes the contextual and organizational factors that affect business-to-business eCommerce adoption in China. Findings show that the important inhibiting factors in China are restricted access to computers, lack of internal trust, lack of enterprise-wide information sharing, intolerance towards failure, and incapability of dealing with rapid change. These variables are analysed in the context of Chinese culture.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/29e8884b0401086c426986898beee5b0b/free2fail}, keywords = {adoption china ecommerce culture b2b} }