Title: Virtual communities: the impact of a commercial orientation on the attitudes towards virtual communities

Authors: Min-Young Lee, Kelly Green Atkins, Youn-Kyung Kim

Addresses: Department of Merchandising, Apparel and Textiles, University of Kentucky, 308 Erikson Hall, Lexington, KY 40506, USA. ' Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, East Tennessee State University, 104 Hutcheson Hall, Johnson City, TN 37614, USA. ' Department of Retail, Hospitality and Tourism Management, University of Tennessee, USA

Abstract: Adopting the view that a virtual community is an influential social entity, this study provides a theoretical framework that identifies a linkage among the individual values of virtual community members, commercial orientation of virtual communities and attitudes towards the information provided by virtual communities. The present study suggests that individual values (i.e., purposive, self-discovery, social and entertainment) influence the selection of virtual communities. The community|s commercial orientation (i.e., commercial or noncommercial), in turn, influences the individual attitudes towards the information provided by the communities. Credibility, relevance and empathy are the proposed attitudes that individuals may form towards the information provided in virtual communities. The proposed model provides valuable implications for marketers and business people who want to source virtual communities as viable marketing channels.

Keywords: virtual communities; online communities; web-based communities; individual value; commercial orientation; credibility; reliability; empathy; electronic marketing; e-marketing; electronic retailing; e-retailing; e-tailing; marketing channels.

DOI: 10.1504/IJEMR.2009.021807

International Journal of Electronic Marketing and Retailing, 2009 Vol.2 No.3, pp.220 - 238

Published online: 04 Dec 2008 *

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