From Reluctance to Resistance: Study of Internet Banking Services Adoption in the United Kingdom
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IGI Global.
Abstract
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The internet banking services is an innovative financial transaction channel that has assumed a new urgency
and relevance in today’s world of business. The developed countries have embraced these services with little
difficulty while the developing countries are beginning to see the benefits. The objective of this research
hinged on the exploration of the supply and demand of internet banking services in the United Kingdom with
special emphasis on three cities: London, Birmingham and Manchester. The study primarily probed into the
extent to which the internet banking services has been adopted in the three major cities of the UK – London,
Birmingham and Manchester. Secondly, it looked at the factors that are driving this adoption and thirdly, the
reasons for non-usage by some segments of the selected regions. The consumer resistance theory by Ram
and Sheth (1989) was therefore used as a framework of the study. As the focus is to ascertain the reasons for
non-usage, and based on this framework, the following divisions were arrived at based on the non-users: 1)
those that intends to use the services and 2) those that have no intention to use the services. The study data
shows that there are significant differences based on the reluctant/resistance paradigm. The reluctant group
falls into those that want to use but have not wholly made up their minds to do so while the resistance groups
are those that have no intention of using the internet banking system at all. The study in a nutshell, provides
financial managers and the academic community with a tool to engage these non-users through product
designs and promotions.
Keywords
H Social Sciences (General), HG Finance