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The impact of the Internet on how and when individuals decide to adopt new products and services remains a critical yet under examined topic. This research examines the linkage between Internet use and the new product diffusion process through the examination of a very large, detailed, Internet usage dataset. Our 12-month longitudinal analysis of 34,731 customers' Internet related behaviours indicates that the introduction of Internet based services is positively correlated with expedited adoption behaviour. Customers that utilized a company's Internet related service innovations were over twice as likely to adopt the company's new product offering during the first year of introduction. We conclude by discussing the implications and need for additional research.
... markets took a simplistic view of consumers as simply searchers for low cost transactions (Str... analysis of 1,400 Internet marketing articles and found that the most researched topic over the ...(2007) assessed extrinsic and intrinsic motivation theory for its explanatory power with respect to u...
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... could be the reasons behind this motivation. To reduce debt, consumers are willing to def...
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... or supplier remains liable unless the consumer's knowledge negates reasonable reliance. This occu... in which a warranty like that set out in Articles VII and IX was found to limit tort liability for d..., and there was no malicious motivation: see e.g. G. Williams, Joint Torts and Contributor...
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... by the stronger party in cross-border consumer contracts and other contracts of adhesion. Part IV... concluded that in the hierarchy of Code articles, the policy of deference to the autonomy of the pa... to insist on arbitration when its real motivation was to prevent having to respond to the complaints...
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The purpose of a study is to examine a particular incarnation of taxation - the imperial stamp duty imposed by the British Parliament on the American colonies briefly from 1765 to 1766, the demise of which is referred to as the "Stamp Act crisis." The version of stamp duty imposed on the colonies bore strong resemblance to that in operation in Great Britain with some modifications to accommodate colonial conditions. By the middle of the 18th century, a stamp duty had become an accepted part of the tax landscape in Britain, and the administrative machinery by which it was collected was firmly established. In view of this, the vehement rejection of a similar impost by the colonists was not a response that was either anticipated or expected. The response by the colonists can, it is argued,...
... views of the origins of and motivations underpinning the Stamp Act crisis. Rather, by usin... and inspectors) as well as a "new consumer marketplace," developments which pre-date the indu...A number of newspaper articles and pamphlets were published registering the outra...
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... on the use of a tobacco trade mark on articles other than tobacco products. Section 8 failed the ...Motivation to profit is irrelevant to the determination of wh... that is harmful and often fatal to the consumer by sophisticated advertising campaigns often speci...
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...8, quant à l'usage des marques sur des articles autres que les produits du tabac. L'article 8 ne s...Consumer Res. 962. Hagan, John. "Can Social Science Save Us... Cour n'a pas reconnu de lien entre la motivation d'une demanderesse et le degré de protection acco...
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...Securities regulators face high consumer expectations regarding the prevention of financial...The motivation behind the false representations (i.e., an intent ...
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A first line of research that appears obvious to us concerns people's motivation for PEBs. Because people appear to be relatively inactive regarding the environmental situation and a sense of emergency is now fuelling the debate about the importance of doing something, proenvironmental groups, behavioural scientists, and to some extent governments are increasingly attempting to find ways to motivate people to stop and then reverse the degradation of environmental conditions. An important observation about initiatives put forward is that they reflect particular ways to motivate people to act. For instance, strategies can take the form of new technology (e.g., more fuel-efficient cars and the production of green or renewable energy), structural initiatives (e.g., access to a curbside recy...
..., we feel that the present series of articles, like the collection of articles in previous speci... with regards to the pervasive consumer culture and the cognitive, social, and institution...
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... qu’une audience ait lieu selon les articles 14.01 et 14.02 de la loi. Ce dernier déléguait s... receivers, trustees, administrators of consumer proposals made under Division II of Part III and p... arguments du syndic, soit la non-motivation de la décision sur sanction et le bien-fondé de ...