Title: eWOM – consumer's tryst with trust and transitions – a qualitative study
Authors: Rishikesh Bhaiswar; N. Meenakshi; Deepak Chawla
Addresses: International Management Institute New Delhi, B 10, Tara Crescent, Block B, Qutab Institutional Area, New Delhi, Delhi 110016, India ' International Management Institute New Delhi, B 10, Tara Crescent, Block B, Qutab Institutional Area, New Delhi, Delhi 110016, India ' International Management Institute New Delhi, B 10, Tara Crescent, Block B, Qutab Institutional Area, New Delhi, Delhi 110016, India
Abstract: The study highlights how online shoppers build, erode, or make trust superfluous in obtaining eWOM communications. Further, the study traces when, why and how online shoppers transition between offline word of mouth (WOM) and eWOM communications. The qualitative investigation involved collecting data by conducting four focus group discussions (FGD) and five in-depth interviews from online shoppers purchasing electronic gadgets using eWOM information. The initial coding was used to get an overview of entire datasets, and final coding was applied to categorise data into fewer category themes and subthemes. The findings of this study unveiled that online shoppers attributed trust to the quality of eWOM information, valence, and visualisation of product information. eWOM lost trust in online communications when they experienced fake reviews and ratings, incomplete reviews or information, or untrustworthy platforms. Further, eWOM users found trust to be superfluous if they were expert consumers, or when they purchased a well-established brand. Lastly, eWOM users transitioned to offline WOM to confirm, verify, build confidence in the entire decision journey of buying high-priced electronic consumer durables (ECD)s.
Keywords: electronic word of mouth; eWOM; trust in eWOM; distrust in eWOM; fake eWOM and transition from eWOM to WOM.
DOI: 10.1504/IJIMA.2025.146381
International Journal of Internet Marketing and Advertising, 2025 Vol.22 No.3, pp.259 - 285
Received: 22 Apr 2022
Accepted: 07 Nov 2022
Published online: 28 May 2025 *