Title
Inviting Strangers To Participate In Collaborative Consumption Through Mobile App
Abstract
Mobile technology has facilitated an emerging form of consumption practices called collaborative consumption. In this study, we investigate one such manifestation whereby merchants send group discount coupons to nearby consumers and encourage them to invite surrounding people to enjoy the discount together. We are interested to know if timing (morning vs. afternoon) and message framing (active vs. passive mutual helping tone) would increase the chance of an individual deciding to invite strangers (and invite a higher proportion of strangers if they did) to participate in the collaborative consumption. Facilitating the participation among strangers can help elevate the reach and influence of collaborative consumption, allowing its potential to be better exploited. Our field experiment findings show that in general people are more likely to invite strangers (and also a higher proportion of strangers in all their invitations) in the morning than in the afternoon. In addition, a message framed to ask the focal individual to actively help others enjoy the deal (active tone) is more effective than a message framed passively, i.e., to let others help him/her (passive tone) in the morning. However, passive tone framing can induce individuals to invite a higher proportion of strangers in the afternoon if they did invite others. These findings have important implications to merchants and app providers on how to more fully tap into the potential of collaborative consumption via mobile technology.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1080/10447318.2016.1275434
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION
Field
DocType
Volume
Framing (construction),Mobile app,World Wide Web,Internet privacy,Ask price,Computer science,Sharing economy,Multimedia
Journal
33
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
6
1044-7318
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.35
11
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Hong Chen121.03
Chee Wei Phang246028.55
Chenghong Zhang311618.03