Paradoxes of Online Investing: Testing the Influence of Technology on User Expectancies*
Autor: | Joseph S. Valacich, Peter A. Todd, Michael G. Morris, Clayton Arlen Looney |
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Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Expectancy theory
Self-efficacy Information Systems and Management Unintended consequences Strategy and Management media_common.quotation_subject General Business Management and Accounting Research model Investment decisions Management of Technology and Innovation Perception Economics Conviction Marketing Social cognitive theory media_common |
Zdroj: | Decision Sciences. 37:205-246 |
ISSN: | 1540-5915 0011-7315 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1540-5915.2006.00122.x |
Popis: | At an increasing rate, individual investors are taking personal control over their financial destinies by investing their money online. Compared to offline do-it-yourself approaches, evidence suggests that investors exhibit lofty expectations and perform significantly worse after going online. However, little is understood about the mechanisms fueling expectancies, the role technologies play in their formation, or how technologies shape investment decisions. Therefore, this article explores the paradoxical nature of online investing technologies, which can give rise to a heightened state of conviction in one's capability to invest successfully. Drawing on Social Cognitive Theory, the concepts of encapsulation and combination are introduced to develop a research model describing how functional and technical self-efficacy judgments independently and collectively shape and influence outcome expectancies. The results suggest that perceptions about what one can accomplish through online investing technologies can lead investors to exaggerate their capabilities, which, in turn, produces elevated expectancies of financial payoffs and nonmonetary rewards. These findings carry important implications. In tasks requiring both computing and functional skills, the principals of encapsulation and combination highlight the importance of comprehensively capturing self-efficacy beliefs across skill domain boundaries. Moreover, online investing represents a paradoxical case that challenges the traditional assumption that fostering a robust sense of efficacy represents a purely noble enterprise. In fact, strong self-efficacy beliefs can prove counterproductive, leading to severe, irreversible, and unintended consequences. Going forward, these discoveries provide a solid foundation to enhance systems designs and facilitate a deeper understanding of user psychology. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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