Consumer Trust and Platformised Retail Personalisation
(2023) p.77-94- Abstract
- As retail is becoming increasingly digitised in its operation and consumer relationships, much faith is put into automation, prediction and insights drawn from consumer data to shape consumer experiences and expectations. Under the umbrella of data-collection and artificial intelligence (AI), this chapter studies the role of consumer trust in retail personalisation. We draw empirical insights from focus-group interviews conducted with Swedish consumers regarding three main aspects: (1) consumer sentiment on data collection; (2) data-dependent retail personalisation; and (3) the digitised market logic that follows from platformisation. Firstly, the results indicate that the level of trust that consumers have in general for data collection... (More)
- As retail is becoming increasingly digitised in its operation and consumer relationships, much faith is put into automation, prediction and insights drawn from consumer data to shape consumer experiences and expectations. Under the umbrella of data-collection and artificial intelligence (AI), this chapter studies the role of consumer trust in retail personalisation. We draw empirical insights from focus-group interviews conducted with Swedish consumers regarding three main aspects: (1) consumer sentiment on data collection; (2) data-dependent retail personalisation; and (3) the digitised market logic that follows from platformisation. Firstly, the results indicate that the level of trust that consumers have in general for data collection is of relevance for how successful retailers use of recommendations systems and targeted ads will be. Secondly, and echoing earlier studies, the user agreements and privacy notices are something that most interviewees find hard to comprehend and pay attention to. And thirdly, data collection, automation and personalisation is often third-party dependent and platformised. To consumers, this adds to a lack of transparency and a sense of lost control over data, which should be taken as a call to action for retailers to be more attentive to consumer trust and to avoid third-party sharing to the extent possible. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/ae07a2fc-841d-43f0-a53b-8585d4a1bedf
- author
- Larsson, Stefan LU and Haresamudram, Kashyap LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2023-10-09
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- platformisation, consumer personalisation, data-collection, retail personalisation, consumer sentiment, consumer trust, artificial intelligence, data-dependent retail personalisation, privacy, third-party collection, transparency
- host publication
- The Future of Consumption : How Technology, Sustainability and Wellbeing will Transform Retail and Customer Experience - How Technology, Sustainability and Wellbeing will Transform Retail and Customer Experience
- editor
- Bäckström, Kristina ; Egan-Wyer, Carys and Samsioe, Emma
- pages
- 18 pages
- publisher
- Palgrave Macmillan
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85197200303
- ISBN
- 978-3-031-33246-3
- 978-3-031-33245-6
- DOI
- 10.1007/978-3-031-33246-3_5
- project
- AI-förordningen - mellan fixering och flexibilitet
- AI Transparency and Consumer Trust
- DATA/TRUST: Tillitsbaserad personuppgiftshantering i den digitala ekonomin
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- ae07a2fc-841d-43f0-a53b-8585d4a1bedf
- date added to LUP
- 2023-02-09 11:29:13
- date last changed
- 2025-01-23 22:39:11
@inbook{ae07a2fc-841d-43f0-a53b-8585d4a1bedf, abstract = {{As retail is becoming increasingly digitised in its operation and consumer relationships, much faith is put into automation, prediction and insights drawn from consumer data to shape consumer experiences and expectations. Under the umbrella of data-collection and artificial intelligence (AI), this chapter studies the role of consumer trust in retail personalisation. We draw empirical insights from focus-group interviews conducted with Swedish consumers regarding three main aspects: (1) consumer sentiment on data collection; (2) data-dependent retail personalisation; and (3) the digitised market logic that follows from platformisation. Firstly, the results indicate that the level of trust that consumers have in general for data collection is of relevance for how successful retailers use of recommendations systems and targeted ads will be. Secondly, and echoing earlier studies, the user agreements and privacy notices are something that most interviewees find hard to comprehend and pay attention to. And thirdly, data collection, automation and personalisation is often third-party dependent and platformised. To consumers, this adds to a lack of transparency and a sense of lost control over data, which should be taken as a call to action for retailers to be more attentive to consumer trust and to avoid third-party sharing to the extent possible.}}, author = {{Larsson, Stefan and Haresamudram, Kashyap}}, booktitle = {{The Future of Consumption : How Technology, Sustainability and Wellbeing will Transform Retail and Customer Experience}}, editor = {{Bäckström, Kristina and Egan-Wyer, Carys and Samsioe, Emma}}, isbn = {{978-3-031-33246-3}}, keywords = {{platformisation; consumer personalisation; data-collection; retail personalisation; consumer sentiment; consumer trust; artificial intelligence; data-dependent retail personalisation; privacy; third-party collection; transparency}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{10}}, pages = {{77--94}}, publisher = {{Palgrave Macmillan}}, title = {{Consumer Trust and Platformised Retail Personalisation}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/160743351/Larsson_and_Haresamudram_2023_Consumer_Trust_and_Platformised_Retail_Personalisation.pdf}}, doi = {{10.1007/978-3-031-33246-3_5}}, year = {{2023}}, }