TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanisms of building customer loyalty
T2 - Mediation of customer satisfaction with online retailing in South Africa
AU - Mofokeng, Thabang Excellent
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
PY - 2025/12
Y1 - 2025/12
N2 - With the global expansion of electronic commerce, today’s retailers make concerted efforts to improve their websites’ ease of use, information quality, privacy, and security as mechanisms to build customer loyalty. However, understanding of how these mechanisms could be mediated by satisfaction and moderated by gender, age, monthly spending, and relationship duration in building customer loyalty towards e-retailers is scant, which is a gap this study investigates. This quantitative study targeted a judgmental sample of 700 online shoppers in South Africa. At least 601 usable responses were returned from an online survey, to test the theoretical framework using structural equation modeling on Amos 29. The findings showed that the significant positive effects of perceived security and privacy on customer loyalty are partially mediated by satisfaction, and moderated by gender, age, monthly spending, and relationship duration. The study unveiled the unified explanatory power of TAM, D&M IS success model, and the ECT, thus offering novel contributions. Practical strategies empowering e-retail managers to redirect efforts to improve satisfaction, which strengthens the effects of perceived security and privacy on loyalty of older and new male customers with high monthly spending are explained in context of South Africa, a developing country.
AB - With the global expansion of electronic commerce, today’s retailers make concerted efforts to improve their websites’ ease of use, information quality, privacy, and security as mechanisms to build customer loyalty. However, understanding of how these mechanisms could be mediated by satisfaction and moderated by gender, age, monthly spending, and relationship duration in building customer loyalty towards e-retailers is scant, which is a gap this study investigates. This quantitative study targeted a judgmental sample of 700 online shoppers in South Africa. At least 601 usable responses were returned from an online survey, to test the theoretical framework using structural equation modeling on Amos 29. The findings showed that the significant positive effects of perceived security and privacy on customer loyalty are partially mediated by satisfaction, and moderated by gender, age, monthly spending, and relationship duration. The study unveiled the unified explanatory power of TAM, D&M IS success model, and the ECT, thus offering novel contributions. Practical strategies empowering e-retail managers to redirect efforts to improve satisfaction, which strengthens the effects of perceived security and privacy on loyalty of older and new male customers with high monthly spending are explained in context of South Africa, a developing country.
KW - Customer loyalty
KW - Customer satisfaction
KW - Privacy
KW - Security
KW - South Africa
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105021239580
U2 - 10.1016/j.teler.2025.100262
DO - 10.1016/j.teler.2025.100262
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105021239580
SN - 2772-5030
VL - 20
JO - Telematics and Informatics Reports
JF - Telematics and Informatics Reports
ER -