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Determinants of consumers’ intention to adopt mobile banking services in Zimbabwe
by
Makanyeza, Charles
in
Bank marketing
/ Banking industry
/ Cellular telephones
/ Consumer behavior
/ Electronic banking
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Innovations
/ Mobile commerce
/ Studies
/ Technology adoption
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
Determinants of consumers’ intention to adopt mobile banking services in Zimbabwe
by
Makanyeza, Charles
in
Bank marketing
/ Banking industry
/ Cellular telephones
/ Consumer behavior
/ Electronic banking
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Innovations
/ Mobile commerce
/ Studies
/ Technology adoption
2017
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Determinants of consumers’ intention to adopt mobile banking services in Zimbabwe
Journal Article
Determinants of consumers’ intention to adopt mobile banking services in Zimbabwe
2017
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Overview
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the determinants of consumers’ intention to adopt mobile banking services in Zimbabwe.
Design/methodology/approach
A survey of 232 bank customers was conducted in Chinhoyi, Zimbabwe, using a structured questionnaire with Likert-type questions. Customers were randomly intercepted as they walked out of five major banks. Structural equation modelling, independent-samples t-test and one-way ANOVA were used to test research hypotheses.
Findings
The study found that perceived usefulness, perceived self-efficacy, social influence, relative advantage and perceived compatibility all have a positive effect, whilst perceived risk has a negative effect on behavioural intention to adopt mobile banking services in Zimbabwe. Perceived ease of use, facilitating conditions, perceived complexity, perceived trialability, awareness-knowledge and demographic factors (gender, age, education and income) did not significantly influence behavioural intention to adopt mobile banking. Perceived ease of use was found to positively influence perceived usefulness, while perceived self-efficacy was found to have a positive effect on perceived ease of use. Behavioural intention was found to positively influence usage of mobile banking services in Zimbabwe.
Research limitations/implications
Data were collected from bank customers in Chinhoyi, one of the emerging towns in Zimbabwe. Future research should be expanded to include other major cities in Zimbabwe and other countries. More similar studies should be conducted to test the factors identified in literature in different contexts and markets and on other innovations.
Practical implications
The study advises banks to pay particular attention to perceived usefulness, perceived self-efficacy, social influence, relative advantage, perceived compatibility and perceived risk when designing new mobile banking services.
Originality/value
There is not a unified position regarding factors influencing mobile banking adoption. Factors vary with contexts, markets, time and types of innovations. The study tested some major factors identified in literature in the context of Zimbabwe.
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited,Emerald Group Publishing Limited
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