servqual model

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Review of literature Service quality models: a review Nitin Seth and S.G. Deshmukh Indian Institute of Technology, New Delhi, India, and Prem Vrat Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee, India During the past few decades service quality has become a major area of attention to Practitioners, managers and researchers owing to its strong impact on business performance, lower costs, customer satisfaction, customer loyalty and profitability (Leonard and Sasser, 1982; Cronin and Taylor, 1992; Gammie, 1992; Hallowell, 1996; Chang and Chen, 1998; Gummesson, 1998; Lasser et al., 2000; Silvestro and Cross, 2000; Newman, 2001; Sureshchander et al., 2002; Guru, 2003 etc.). There has been a continued research on the definition, modeling, measurement, data collection procedure, data analysis etc., issues of service quality, leading to development of sound base for the researchers. This documented knowledge base through several studies on the subject can be of great use to researchers and practitioners in providing a direction on how to explore/modify the existing service quality concepts with the changing world scenario (shift from conventional personalized services to web enabled services). For an organization to gain competitive advantage it must use technology to gather information on market demands and exchange it between organizations for thepurpose of enhancing the service quality. Researchers and managers thrive for learning details about components of service quality in their organization of obvious reasons of customer satisfaction, increased profitability etc. In this context model gains specific importance as it not only help in learning the factors associated with it but also will provide a direction for improvements. Department of Business and Industrial Management Page 1

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Page 1: servqual model

Review of literature

Service quality models: a review

Nitin Seth and S.G. DeshmukhIndian Institute of Technology, New Delhi, India, andPrem VratIndian Institute of Technology, Roorkee, India

During the past few decades service quality has become a major area of attention to Practitioners, managers and researchers owing to its strong impact on business performance, lower costs, customer satisfaction, customer loyalty and profitability (Leonard and Sasser, 1982; Cronin and Taylor, 1992; Gammie, 1992; Hallowell, 1996; Chang and Chen, 1998; Gummesson, 1998; Lasser et al., 2000; Silvestro and Cross, 2000; Newman, 2001; Sureshchander et al., 2002; Guru, 2003 etc.). There has been a continued research on the definition, modeling, measurement, data collection procedure, data analysis etc., issues of service quality, leading to development of sound base for the researchers.

This documented knowledge base through several studies on the subject can be of great use to researchers and practitioners in providing a direction on how to explore/modify the existing service quality concepts with the changing world scenario (shift from conventional personalized services to web enabled services). For an organization to gain competitive advantage it must use technology to gather information on market demands and exchange it between organizations for thepurpose of enhancing the service quality. Researchers and managers thrive for learning details about components of service quality in their organization of obvious reasons of customer satisfaction, increased profitability etc. In this context model gains specific importance as it not only help in learning the factors associated with it but also will provide a direction for improvements.

A conceptual model attempts to show the relationships that exist between salient variables. (Ghobadian et al., 1994). It is a simplified description of the actual situations. It is envisaged that conceptual models in service quality enable management to identify quality problems and thus help in planning for the launch of a quality improvement program thereby improving the efficiency, profitability and overall performance.

This paper makes an attempt to study various service quality models covering the aspects of conventional services to web interacted services. The primary aim of these models is to enable the management to understand and enhance the quality of the organization and its offering. Nineteen conceptual service quality models reported during the period (1984-2003) are reviewed in this paper. Each of them is representative of a different point of view about services. The organization of this paper is as follows: initially after highlighting the need for the present study, a generalized framework of the study is presented. This is followed by a brief discussion of the models and a critical appraisal of the same. Finally the agenda for future research is spelt out.

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BASIC DIMENSIONS OF THE (SERVQUAL MODEL) AND ITS IMPACT ON THE LEVEL OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF THE HOUSING BANK IN KARAK, JORDAN Dr. Aymn Sulieman, PhD

Faculty of Business Administration Mutah University, Jordan

Banking industry environment experiences rapid changes reflected in the intensification of competition between banks and increased awareness of current and potential customers. Therefore, the quality of service and customer satisfaction is a major challenge for banks as it is reflected on the growth and development of these institutions. Therefore, it is imperative that the banks should strive to provide high quality services to meet the needs and desires of customers to enhance the positive relationship between the banks and their customers. The quality and continuous improvement of banking services provided to customers, is one of the most important requirements for the maintenance of the European Scientific Journal January 2013 edition vol.9, No.1 ISSN: 1857 – 7881 (Print) e - ISSN 1857- 7431 22

Singapore stock broking service quality: fifteen percent gap Lee Yik-Chee DBA, Meredith G.G. AM PhD, Marchant T PhD Southern Cross University

Over the last two to three decades, service quality, customer satisfaction, customer perceived value and loyalty have been ongoing research areas in world-wide marketing literature (Boulding et al., 1993; Caruana and Msida, 2002; Durvasula et al., 2003/2004; Ladhari, 2008; Tam, 2004; Rust and Oliver, 1994). Compared to the focus of much of the literature, financial services, including stock broking, are more complex than other services and deserve more in-depth attention. This study addresses a substantive topic of high significance to customers (financial services) which has been almost “completely neglected in marketing research” (Martenson, 2008, p. 142).

We investigated five variables in relation to service quality for stock investors (customers) in Singapore. The five are demographics, expertise, perceived value, satisfaction and loyalty (behavioural intentions). Previous research indicates that service quality is a critical component of customer perceptions of service. Although service quality is critical in service industries, empirical research examining the service aspects of stock broking is limited or almost non-existent (Durvasula et al., 2006). Recently a small number of studies have investigated financial advising and services in terms of advisor information and relationships (Martenson, 2008), credit card usage (Gan et al., 2008) and real estate investments (Chiang et al., 2008) but stock broking service is relatively under-researched. With mushrooming numbers of “Mum and Dad” investors, the recent sustained growth in stock markets, followed by the global financial crisis, this is clearly a significant issue.

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Ch.1 Introduction

1.1Best and top online shopping sites in India list: December 2014

Amazon

flipkart

snapdeal

Paytm

Ebay

Jabango

Myntra

Shopclues

Paperfry

Homeshop18

Infibeam

Amazon.com, Inc. is an American electronic commerce company with headquarters in

Seattle, Washington. It is the largest Internet-based retailer in the United States. Amazon.com

started as an online bookstore, but soon diversified,

Selling DVDs, VHSs, CDs, video and MP3 downloads/streaming, software, videogames, electr

onics, apparel, furniture, food, toys, and jewelry. The company also produces consumer

electronics—notably, Amazon Kindle e-book readers, Fire tablets, Fire TV and Fire Phone —

and is a major provider of cloud computing services.

Amazon has separate retail websites for United States, United Kingdom & Ireland, France,

Canada, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Australia, Brazil, Japan, China, India and

Mexico. Amazon India will soon start offering music, movie and video streaming services in

India. Amazon also offers international shipping to certain other countries for some of its

products. In 2011, it had professed an intention to launch its websites in Poland and Sweden

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Flipkart is an Indian E-Commerce company established in 2007 by Sachin

Bansal and BinnyBansal. It operates exclusively in India, with headquarters

at Bangalore, Karnataka. Flipkart has launched its own product range under the name

"DigiFlip" with products including tablets, USBs, and laptop bags. Flipkart has also launched

its own range of personal healthcare and home appliances under the brand "Citron".

In May 2014, Flipkart received $210 million from DST Global and in July it raised $1 billion

led by existing investors Tiger Global and South Africa's media group Naspers

Snapdeal.com is an online marketplace, New Delhi, India. The company was started by

KunalBahl, a Whartongraduate as part of the dual degree M&T Engineering and Business

program at Penn, and RohitBansal, an alumnus ofIIT Delhi in February 2010.

Snapdeal.com was started in February 2010 as a daily deals platform inspired

by Groupon.com but expanded in September 2011 to become an online marketplace.[4] Snapdeal

has grown to become the largest online marketplace in India offering an assortment of 4

million+ products across diverse categories from over 50,000 sellers, shipping to 4,000towns

and cities in India.

In the year 2012-13 Snapdeal had said that it expected revenues of about 

600 crore (US$94 million). Betting big on the growth of mobile commerce, KunalBahl, the

CEO, said at the time that 15-20 per cent of the sales on Snapdeal came through m-commerce.

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Snapdeal.com expected the total sale of products traded on its platform to cross 

2000 crore (US$310 million) in the fiscal year 2013-14 helped by its robust growth in the past

two years and the growing popularity of e-commerce in India. In June 2014,

Snapdealannounced that it had achieved the milestone of 1000 sellers on its plarform getting

sales of over Rs 1 crore.

Started with Mobile Recharge and Bill Payment website now Paytm selling everything from

Home Decor, Clothing, Laptops to Mobile at killer price. In very short time period Paytm has

grown very fastly and able to place under our Top 10 Indian Shopping Website list.

eBay Inc. is an American multinational corporation and e-commerce company,

providing consumer-to-consumer &business-to-consumer sales services via Internet. It is

headquartered in San Jose, California, United States. eBay was founded by Pierre Omidyar in

1995, and became a notable success story of the dot-com bubble; it is a multi-billion dollar

business with operations localized in over thirty countries.

The company manages eBay.com, an online auction and shopping website in which people and

businesses buy and sell a broad variety of goods and services worldwide. In addition to its

auction-style sales, the website has since expanded to include "Buy It Now" shopping; shopping

by UPC, ISBN, or other kind of SKU (via Half.com); online classified advertisements

(via Kijiji or eBay Classifieds); online event ticket trading (via StubHub); online money

transfers (via PayPal) and other services.

It is not a free website, but charges users an invoice seller fee on the basis of if they have sold

or listed any items

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Jabong sells shoes, apparel, accessories, home décor and furniture through its website. The e-

store at present carries over 1000 brands and over 90,000 products. Other products include

jewellery and gold coins. In November 2012, Jabong.com and cricket equipment maker SG

Cricket presented a range of VirenderSehwag cricket bats — VS319 — which was sold

exclusively through Jabong.

As noted by Business Standard, Jabong added top International brands to its catalogue. The

brands include UK's high street fashion brands Dorothy Perkins, Miss Selfridge and River

Island along with the Spanish brand Mango. In November 2013, Jabong entered into a

partnership with the brand Jack & Jones, to sell merchandise for the band Above & Beyond

In January 2014, Jabong partnered with Stylista, a collaborative fashion platform. The

collection includes Indian designers like Wendell Rodricks, PriyadarshiniRao and NishkaLulla

In 2014; Jabong launched an exclusive collection designed by RohitBal. Noted by Economic

Times, the company is also launching in-house brands covering apparel, shoes and accessories.

In May 2014 NBA and Jabong partnered to launch the first official NBA online store in India

According to Business-Standard.com, Jabong set to enter 1 billion dollar club in the year 2015

Myntra.com is an Indian e-commerce company of fashion and casual lifestyle products,

headquartered in Bangalore, Karnataka The Company was founded in 2007 by

IITiansMukeshBansal, AshutoshLawania and VineetSaxena with a focus on personalization of

gift items. By 2010, Myntra shifted its focus to the online retailing of branded apparel.

In May 2014, Myntra.com merged with Flipkart to compete against Amazon which entered the

Indian market in June 2013.

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A reputed online shopping retail website having headquarter in Gurgaon, Shopclues.com

maintains more than 12,000 merchants who are registered with the company. It is one of the top

ecommerce websites in India, which deals in more than 2 million products. They guarantee

authenticity of products, warranty and even ensure lowest price. They even have a record of

catering to more than 42 million online visitors. The company has even more than 350

registered employees across the country. They offer wide range of branded products to

consumers from every corner of the country.

Shopclues.com initiate free delivery services at the doorsteps of customers through reputed

courier services to nearly 10,000 cities across the country. They even initiate a 30-day return

guarantee if unable to meet customer satisfaction. One of the leading online shopping

companies in India, Shopclues.com accepts online payment through major credit and debit

cards, including net banking services. The online shopping website service employs more than

400 personnel for effective handling of the business and is even funded by national institutional

investors.

Pepperfry.com is one of the top online shopping websites in India. They have abundant stocks

of various products associated to lifestyle enhancement, home care, appliances, home décor,

furnishing, kitchen, dining and many more. All products are authentic and guaranteed. The

online merchandize offers exclusive payment services like pre-payment, easy monthly

installments and even cash on delivery.

The company offers fastest shipping and delivery of all products ordered. They even offer huge

discount on various festive seasons throughout the year. New customers are also entitled to

various shopping discount vouchers amounting to Rs.2000.

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Pepperfry.com started operations since 2012 to deliver online shopping experience that

customers are bereft of till now. They have even partnered with thousands of merchant partners

who showcase their craftsmanship, service orientation and design skills across India.

Pepperfry.com is also one of the renowned online shopping companies that showcases a

number of branded products and also offers them on special price that is otherwise not available

at open market. The online marketing platform also offers favorable and dedicated customer

care support service.

HomeShop18 is an online and on-air retail and distribution venture of Network 18 Group, India.

HomeShop18 was launched on 9 April 2008 as India's first 24-hour Home Shopping TV

channel, where anchors performed live demonstration of products on sale similar to HSN or

QVC in USA. The television channel established HomeShop18's foothold in Indian retail

because of high television penetration. Later, as the internet reach grew all over the country,

HomeShop18 launched www.homeshop18.com which was ranked as the No. 5 most trafficked

Ecommerce portal in India by Comscore in July 2013.

G S Home Shopping of Korea, the third largest home shopping company in the world, has a

15% stake in the company.

HomeShop18 acquired CoinJoos.com, online books, movies and music retailer in August 2011

for an undisclosed amount. The acquisition is the main contributor to HomeShop18.com's

Books catalogue.

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Infibeam is an Indian e-commerce company headquartered in Ahmedabad, India. It is an online

retailer for books, electronics, and automobiles in India. Started in 2007, the company has

offices in Ahmedabad, Delhi, Mumbai andBangalore, and has a total of 1300

employees. Infibeam also launched an e-book reader, Infibeam Pi, its successor Pi2, and a

media device, Infibeam Phi.

Infibeam's businesses include online retailing through its flagship website 'infibeam.com', e-

commerce platform software service through 'buildabazaar.com', e-commerce marketplace

'dhamaal.com' and its own branded e-book reader. The strategy of Infibeam was described

by Forbes as "that seems to defy most standard models"The turnover of the company was

reported to be   1000 Crores as of November 2013.

Infibeam.com, the online retail website of the company, sells books, electronics and lifestyle

products. The website has a selection of 1.2 Crore products across books, electronics, lifestyle,

gifts and media. In 2011, the company established Infibeam Logistics, its own logistics arm in

major Indian cities. In September 2010, infibeam was among Economic Times's Top 5 Digital

Brands in the e-commerce category. Infibeam's acquisition of customer base at very low cost

has been recorded as a B-school case study by Ivey Publishing.Infibeam is the only authorised

online seller of iPhones in India

Naaptol is a home shopping company in India that sells various products in categories ranging

from apparel, electronics, home furnishings, kitchen appliances, furniture, etc. It is an alternate

retail platform that is present across various forms of media to cater to a wide audience across

the country. The company has its headquarters in Mumbai, Maharashtra. In the initial

stage, Naaptol started with a seed capital of Rs.50 lakhs. Later in 2009 it expanded as an online

marketplace and started offering products to purchase online. With this slight tweak in the

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business model, Naaptol's turnover became Rs. 10 Crore (2009-2010) from Rs. 1 Crore in

2008-2009. In 2010, Naaptol started investing in print media.

Naaptol follows the marketplace business model wherein it facilitates online and offline sales of

third party products to its customer base, in addition to handling the customer service. In other

words, it provides a platform for merchants and sellers to sell their products through Naaptol so

that small-time merchants/sellers can reach out to a wider customer base and customers enjoy

great value-for-money product

Yebhi.com is an Indian Online shopping E-commerce portal for Home, Lifestyle & Fashion e-

retailer, launched in the year 2009.

Yebhi, which began as BigShoeBazaar.com, has a registered user base of about 1.5 million

people, of whom about half a million have transacted on the site. Nexus Venture Partners

and N. R. Narayana Murthy’s Catamaran Ventures invested Rs 40 crore in Agarwal’s company

in mid-2011.

On July' 10th 2012, Big Shoe Bazaar India Pvt Ltd. owner of Brand Yebhi.com announced that

it has raised INR 100 Cr in Series C round of funding led by Fidelity Growth Partners India and

Qualcomm.] Subsequently, in April 2013, its site was revamped, along with a new logo.

On 4th September 2014, they changed their business model to coupon store and served Flipkart,

Jabong, Myntra, Zovi, Koovs&Zivame as their clients.

Initially Yebhi.com has categories lifestyle & Home products and offers products from a range

of some 250 brands to its customers dealing in Shoes, Apparels,

Bags, Mobiles, Cameras, Sunglasses, Watches, Books, Laptops , Home furnishing, Home

décor, Home ware, Lingerieand Fragrances.

After the new Business Model, they are now into coupons and provide exciting offers to

everyone so that people can see products from all the stores on one site

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Yepme is an online shopping company headquartered in Gurgaon, Haryana, India. It was

established in April 2011. The company specializes in the online retailing of men’s and

women's garments and accessories. In August 2011, the company positioned itself as a fully-

fledged private label fashion brand.

The main target customer for Yepme.com is tier 2 and tier 3 towns, where the big apparel

brands do not have many retail stores. According to Hindu Business Line, of the 13,000 orders

that Yepme.com received in July and August 2011, about 69 per cent were from about 500 tier

2 and tier 3 towns, with the rest coming from six major cities. About 35 per cent of the site

orders are from places not serviced by courier companies and can only be reached through India

Post

According to Yepme's COO Sandeep Sharma; since around 70 per cent of Yepme's shipments

are going to the smaller towns and the company is providing a Hindi language option on its

website. Currently besides Hindi, customers at Yepme.com can also shop in Tamil, Telugu,

Malayalam& Kannada.

In the October 2011 edition of Business Today, it was reported that Yepme.com attracts over

21,000 male shoppers daily, and of that, about 1,000 visitors place at least one order on the

site. In August 2012, Business Today reported that around 49 per cent of Yepme's 200,000

customers so far have gone back to it a second time.

The brand is targeting a turnover of $25 million in its first year of operations and plans to scale

the revenues to over $500 million in the following 3–4 years

Inkfruit is an online shopping store, not available now for submitting designs where t-shirt

designs are submitted and voted for by a community. It was launched in December 2007 (then

called Gnome) by Fingerprints Fashion Inc., based in Mumbai, India. KashyapDalal, an

undergraduate of IIT Bombay,and graduated from IIM Lucknow is the CEO of Inkfruit.This

concept is taken from Threadless to India by Inkfruit.

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CromaRetail.com is one of the recognized top eCommerce websites in India dealing in

electronics and home appliances. This exclusive electronics mega online store include vast

collection of products categorized under varied sections such as phones, computers,

entertainment, home appliances, kitchen appliances, gaming, cameras and accessories. They

include products from leading manufacturers of different domains in the electronics and

appliance sectors.

CromaRetail.com, one of the notable online shopping companies in India even provide a

number of alluring offers with attractive discounts and deals on numerous occasions. All

products ordered online are delivered to desired destination within least possible time through

dedicated courier services.

Croma allows users to choose from more than six thousand products across diverse categories.

All products purchased from the online store enjoy a return policy within 15 days of delivery.

Moreover, well trained and knowledgeable advisors help users to make informed purchasing

decisions.

Fashionandyou.com is an emerging leader of e-retailing industry in India. They are one of the

fastest growing eCommerce retailers with high membership base. The online retailer offers

wide range of products of innumerable brands. They are highly popular due to enormous price

cuts; almost up to 80% than existing retail price. The eCommerce platform, among top online

shopping sites in India, gets into partnership with a number of luxury and fashion brands to

bring in variety of items at exclusively lowest prices for a limited period. The company even

notifies registered members about upcoming offers through emails, social networking pages and

SMS. No membership charge is involved to register.

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Fashionandyou is a business venture under Smile Group and falls under the list of online

shopping websites in India. They are also a part of reputed international organization, Brand

Alliance. The sales offer on the online shopping website starts from 10 AM and continues for 3

days, subjected to availability of items. They even offer services of experienced customer

support executives, in case of any problem regarding delay in shipment or refund issues.

ShoppersStop brings limitless possibilities as an online store in India. Amid the presence of

numerous online shopping portals, ShoppersStop.com has made a good mark with products

from some of the best lifestyle brands. Various national and international brands in kid’s

clothes, women apparel, men’s clothing, fashion accessories and gifts are available at the online

store. Some of the leading brands associated with the store include Calvin Klein, Barbie, Being

Human, Levis, L’Oreal, Ray Ban, Celio, Revlon, etc.

It is also a one-stop solution for fashion accessories such as men’s watches, ladies watches,

cosmetics, fragrances, handbags, jewelry, footwear along with home furnishing and décor

items. Offline stores of Shopper Stop is an established name in India and now its online option

is also turning out as one of the top online shopping sites in India. ShoppersStop.com maintains

100% return policy where the dissatisfied customers can return the purchased items with 14

days of delivery.

Futurebazaar.com is one of the fastest growing Indian online shopping companies, attracting

various customers from almost every corner of the country. They are growing rapidly as an

exclusive online shopping platform with a wide variety of products touching almost all

categories. The list of products varies widely – lifestyle, toys, fashion apparel, kitchenware,

cookware, food, beverages, electronics, furnishings etc. The online merchandise has

collaboration with a number of companies. Their faster delivery process has also helped in

acquiring much accolade than other online merchandises.

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The online shopping company accepts payment through online transaction by credit and debit

cards. The website has radically changed overall online shopping experience through credible

customer service and faster delivery service. Expert customer care personnel also initiate

process to resolve any matter related to delay in shipping orders. Futurebazaar.com is among

the top online shopping sites in India that offer exclusive discount offers on all products

throughout the year.

Edabba.com is a growing online merchandise. They are one of the evolving online

merchandises that indulge in retail therapy and offers exclusive online shopping mantra of

present times. The online merchandise is a highly convenient platform for shopping, 24 hours a

day. Delivery takes place in the fastest possible time. There is a wide range of payment options

that make the online platform one of the favorable online shopping companies in India.

Presently, the online merchandize offers various products like electronics, consumer durable

products, music, books, organic food and travel booking services. They also have ranking

position in the list of online shopping websites in India. They have their exclusive service

across Goa, Punjab, Rajasthan, Bihar, Uttarakhand, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana and Orissa. They

strive best to create a perfect environment mixing traditional retail marketing and online

shopping experiences.

Edabba.com has over 40000 SKU’s under their list. They deal in reputed brands and all their

products are 100% authentic in nature. The merchandise also has various Trust Points that act

as a bridge between the online marketing corporation and consumers.

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Ch.2 History

Online shopping or e-shopping is a form of electronic commerce which allows consumers to

directly buy goods or services from a seller over the Internet using a web browser. Alternative

names are: e-web-store, e-shop, e-store, Internet shop, web-shop, web-store, online store, online

storefront and virtual store. Mobile commerce (or m-commerce) describes purchasing from an

online retailer's mobile optimized online site or app.

An online shop evokes the physical analogy of buying products or services at a bricks-and-

mortar retailer or shopping center; the process is called business-to-consumer (B2C) online

shopping. In the case where a business buys from another business, the process is called

business-to-business (B2B) online shopping. The largest of these online retailing corporations

are Alibaba, Amazon.com, and eBay. Retail success is no longer all about physical stores. This

is evident because of the increase in retailers now offering online store interfaces for

consumers. With the growth of online shopping, comes a wealth of new market footprint

coverage opportunities for stores that can appropriately cater to offshore market demands and

service requirements

Michael Aldrich, pioneer of online shopping in the 1980s.

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English entrepreneur Michael Aldrich invented online shopping in 1979. His system connected

a modified domestic TV to a real-time transaction processing computer via a domestic

telephone line. He believed that videotext, the modified domestic TV technology with a simple

menu-driven human–computer interface, was a 'new, universally applicable, participative

communication medium — the first since the invention of the telephone.' This enabled 'closed'

corporate information systems to be opened to 'outside' correspondents not just for transaction

processing but also for e-messaging and information retrieval and dissemination, later known as

e-business. His definition of the new mass communications medium as 'participative'

[interactive, many-to-many] was fundamentally different from the traditional definitions of

mass communication and mass media and a precursor to the social networking on the Internet

25 years later.

In March 1980 he went on to launch Redifon's Office Revolution, which allowed consumers,

customers, agents, distributors, suppliers and service companies to be connected on-line to the

corporate systems and allow business transactions to be completed electronically in real-time.

During the 1980 she designed, manufactured, sold, installed, maintained and supported many

online shopping systems, using videotex technology. These systems which also provided voice

response and handprint processing pre-date the Internet and the World Wide Web, the IBM PC,

and Microsoft MS-DOS, and were installed mainly in the UK by large corporations.

The first World Wide Web server and browser, created by Tim Berners-Lee in 1990, opened for

commercial use in 1991. Thereafter, subsequent technological innovations emerged in 1994:

online banking, the opening of an online pizza shop by Pizza Hut,[6]Netscape's SSL v2

encryption standard for secure data transfer, and Intershop's first online shopping system. The

first secure retail transaction over the Web was either by NetMarket or Internet Shopping

Network in 1994. Immediately after, Amazon.com launched its online shopping site in 1995

and eBay was also introduced in 1995. Alibaba's sites Taobao and Tmall were launched in 2003

and 2008, respectively.

2.1 International e-commerce statistics

Statistics show that in 2012, Asia-Pacific increased their international sales over 30% giving

them over $433 billion in revenue. That is a $69 billion difference between the U.S. revenue of

$364.66 billion. It is estimated that Asia-Pacific will increase by another 30% in the year 2013

putting them ahead by more than one-third of all global ecommerce sales.

The largest online shopping day in the world is Singles Day, with sales just in Alibaba's sites at

US$9.3 billion in 2014.

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2.1.1 Customers

Online customers must have access to the Internet and a valid method of payment in order to

complete a transaction.

Generally, higher levels of education and personal income correspond to more favourable

perceptions of shopping online. Increased exposure to technology also increases the probability

of developing favourable attitudes towards new shopping channels.

In a December 2011 study, Equation Research surveyed 1,500 online shoppers and found that

87% of tablet owners made online transactions with their tablet devices during the early

Christmas shopping season.

2.1.2 Logistics

Consumers find a product of interest by visiting the website of the retailer directly or by

searching among alternative vendors using a shopping search engine.

Once a particular product has been found on the website of the seller, most online retailers use

shopping cart software to allow the consumer to accumulate multiple items and to adjust

quantities, like filling a physical shopping cart or basket in a conventional store. A "checkout"

process follows (continuing the physical-store analogy) in which payment and delivery

information is collected, if necessary. Some stores allow consumers to sign up for a permanent

online account so that some or all of this information only needs to be entered once. The

consumer often receives an e-mail confirmation once the transaction is complete.

Less sophisticated stores may rely on consumers to phone or e-mail their orders (although full

credit card numbers, expiry date, and Card Security Code, or bank account and routing number

should not be accepted by e-mail, for reasons of security).

2.1.3Payment

Online shoppers commonly use a credit card or a PayPal account in order to make payments.

However, some systems enable users to create accounts and pay by alternative means, such as:

Billing to mobile phones and landlines

Cash on delivery (C.O.D.)

Cheque/ Check

Debit card

Direct debit in some countries

Electronic money of various types

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Gift cards

Postal money order

Wire transfer/delivery on payment

Invoice, especially popular in some markets/countries, such as Switzerland

Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies

Some online shops will not accept international credit cards. Some require both the purchaser's

billing and shipping address to be in the same country as the online shop's base of operation.

Other online shops allow customers from any country to send gifts anywhere.

The financial part of a transaction may be processed in real time (e.g. letting the consumer

know their credit card was declined before they log off), or may be done later as part of the

fulfillment process.

2.1.4 Product delivery

Once a payment has been accepted, the goods or services can be delivered in the following

ways:

Downloading/Digital distribution:[15] The method often used for digital media products such as

software, music, movies, or images.

Drop shipping: The order is passed to the manufacturer or third-party distributor, who then

ships the item directly to the consumer, bypassing the retailer's physical location to save time,

money, and space.

In-store pick-up: The customer selects a local store using a locator software and picks up the

delivered product at the selected location. This is the method often used in the bricks and clicks

business model.

Printing out, provision of a code for, or e-mailing of such items as admission tickets and scrip

(e.g., gift certificates and coupons). The tickets, codes, or coupons may be redeemed at the

appropriate physical or online premises and their content reviewed to verify their eligibility

(e.g., assurances that the right of admission or use is redeemed at the correct time and place, for

the correct dollar amount, and for the correct number of uses).

2.1.5 Shipping: The product is shipped to a customer-designated address.

The patron picks up pre-purchased tickets for an event, such as a play, sporting event, or

concert, either just before the event or in advance. With the onset of the Internet and e-

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commerce sites, which allow customers to buy tickets online, the popularity of this service has

increased.

2.1.6 Shopping cart systems

Simple systems allow the off-line administration of products and categories. The shop is then

generated as HTML files and graphics that can be uploaded to a web space. The systems do not

use an online database.

A high-end solution can be bought or rented as a stand-alone program or as an addition to an

enterprise resource planning program. It is usually installed on the company's webserver and

may integrate into the existing supply chain so that ordering, payment, delivery, accounting and

warehousing can be automated to a large extent.

Other solutions allow the user to register and create an online shop on a portal that hosts

multiple shops simultaneously from one back office.

Open source shopping cart packages include advanced platforms such as Interchange, and off-

the-shelf solutions such as Magento, nopCommerce, osCommerce, Shopgate, PrestaShop,

Shopify, Zen Cart, OpenCart.

Commercial systems can also be tailored so the shop does not have to be created from scratch.

By using an existing framework, software modules for various functionalities required by a web

shop can be adapted and combined.

2.1.7 Online gift shops

Online gift shops are websites which have the primary objective of selling products online that

will be given to others. These online retailers may or may not be associated to a physical shop.

2.1.8 Design

Customers are attracted to online shopping not only because of high levels of convenience, but

also because of broader selections, competitive pricing, and greater access to information.

Business organizations seek to offer online shopping not only because it is of much lower cost

compared to bricks and mortar stores, but also because it offers access to a worldwide market,

increases customer value, and builds sustainable capabilities.

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2.1.9 Information load

Designers of online shops are concerned with the effects of information load. Information load

is a product of the spatial and temporal arrangements of stimuli in the webstore. Compared with

conventional retail shopping, the information environment of virtual shopping is enhanced by

providing additional product information such as comparative products and services, as well as

various alternatives and attributes of each alternative, etc.

Two major dimensions of information load are complexity and novelty. Complexity refers to

the number of different elements or features of a site, often the result of increased information

diversity. Novelty involves the unexpected, suppressed, new, or unfamiliar aspects of the site.

The novelty dimension may keep consumers exploring a shopping site, whereas the complexity

dimension may induce impulse purchases.

2.1.10 Market share

E-commerce B2C product sales totaled $142.5 billion, representing about 8% of retail product

sales in the United States. The $26 billion worth of clothes sold online represented about 13%

of the domestic market,] and with 72% of women looking online for apparel, it has become one

of the most popular cross-shopping categories. Forrester Research estimates that the United

States online retail industry will be worth $279 billion in 2015. The popularity of online

shopping continues to erode sales of conventional retailers. For example Best Buy, the largest

retailer of electronics in the U.S. in August 2014 reported its tenth consecutive quarterly dip in

sales, citing an increasing shift by consumers to online shopping.

There were 242 million people shopping online in China in 2012.

For developing countries and low-income households in developed countries, adoption of e-

commerce in place of or in addition to conventional methods is limited by a lack of affordable

Internet access.

2.2 Advantages

2.2.1 Convenience

Online stores are usually available 24 hours a day, and many consumers have Internet access

both at work and at home. Other establishments such as internet cafes and schools provide

internet access as well. In contrast, visiting a conventional retail store requires travel and must

take place during business hours.

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In the event of a problem with the item (e.g., the product was not what the consumer ordered,

the product was not satisfactory), consumers are concerned with the ease of returning an item in

exchange for either the correct product or a refund. Consumers may need to contact the retailer,

visit the post office and pay return shipping, and then wait for a replacement or refund. Some

online companies have more generous return policies to compensate for the traditional

advantage of physical stores. For example, the online shoe retailer Zappos.com includes labels

for free return shipping, and does not charge a restocking fee, even for returns which are not the

result of merchant error. (Note: In the United Kingdom, online shops are prohibited from

charging a restocking fee if the consumer cancels their order in accordance with the Consumer

Protection (Distance Selling) Act 2000).

2.2.2 Information and reviews

Online stores must describe products for sale with text, photos, and multimedia files, whereas in

a physical retail store, the actual product and the manufacturer's packaging will be available for

direct inspection (which might involve a test drive, fitting, or other experimentation).

Some online stores provide or link to supplemental product information, such as instructions,

safety procedures, demonstrations, or manufacturer specifications. Some provide background

information, advice, or how-to guides designed to help consumers decide which product to buy.

Some stores even allow customers to comment or rate their items. There are also dedicated

review sites that host user reviews for different products. Reviews and even some blogs give

customers the option of shopping for cheaper purchases from all over the world without having

to depend on local retailers.

In a conventional retail store, clerks are generally available to answer questions. Some online

stores have real-time chat features, but most rely on e-mails or phone calls to handle customer

questions.

2.2.3 Price and selection

One advantage of shopping online is being able to quickly seek out deals for items or services

provided by many different vendors (though some local search engines do exist to help

consumers locate products for sale in nearby stores). Search engines, online price comparison

services and discovery shopping engines can be used to look up sellers of a particular product

or service.

Shipping costs (if applicable) reduce the price advantage of online merchandise, though

depending on the jurisdiction, a lack of sales tax may compensate for this.

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Shipping a small number of items, especially from another country, is much more expensive

than making the larger shipments bricks-and-mortar retailers order. Some retailers (especially

those selling small, high-value items like electronics) offer free shipping on sufficiently large

orders.

Another major advantage for retailers is the ability to rapidly switch suppliers and vendors

without disrupting users' shopping experience.

2.3 Disadvantages

2.3.1 Fraud and security concerns

Given the lack of ability to inspect merchandise before purchase, consumers are at higher risk

of fraud than face-to-face transactions. Merchants also risk fraudulent purchases using stolen

credit cards or fraudulent repudiation of the online purchase. However, merchants face less risk

from physical theft by using a warehouse instead of a retail storefront.

Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) encryption has generally solved the problem of credit card

numbers being intercepted in transit between the consumer and the merchant. However, one

must still trust the merchant (and employees) not to use the credit card information

subsequently for their own purchases, and not to pass the information to others. Also, hackers

might break into a merchant's web site and steal names, addresses and credit card numbers,

although the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard is intended to minimize the impact

of such breaches. Identity theft is still a concern for consumers. A number of high-profile

break-ins in the 2000s has prompted some U.S. states to require disclosure to consumers when

this happens. Computer security has thus become a major concern for merchants and e-

commerce service providers, who deploy countermeasures such as firewalls and anti-virus

software to protect their networks.

Phishing is another danger, where consumers are fooled into thinking they are dealing with a

reputable retailer, when they have actually been manipulated into feeding private information to

a system operated by a malicious party. Denial of service attacks are a minor risk for merchants,

as are server and network outages.

Quality seals can be placed on the Shop web page if it has undergone an independent

assessment and meets all requirements of the company issuing the seal. The purpose of these

seals is to increase the confidence of online shoppers. However, the existence of many different

seals, or seals unfamiliar to consumers, may foil this effort to a certain extent. A number of

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resources offer advice on how consumers can protect themselves when using online retailer

services. These include:

Sticking with known stores, or attempting to find independent consumer reviews of their

experiences; also ensuring that there is comprehensive contact information on the website

before using the service, and noting if the retailer has enrolled in industry oversight programs

such as a trust mark or a trust seal.

Before buying from a new company, evaluate the website by considering issues such as: the

professionalism and user-friendliness of the site; whether or not the company lists a telephone

number and/or street address along with e-contact information; whether a fair and reasonable

refund and return policy is clearly stated; and whether there are hidden price inflators, such as

excessive shipping and handling charges.

Ensuring that the retailer has an acceptable privacy policy posted. For example note if the

retailer does not explicitly state that it will not share private information with others without

consent.

Ensuring that the vendor address is protected with SSL (see above) when entering credit card

information. If it does the address on the credit card information entry screen will start with

"HTTPS".

Using strong passwords, without personal information. Another option is a "pass phrase," which

might be something along the lines: "I shop 4 good a buy!!" These are difficult to hack, and

provides a variety of upper, lower, and special characters and could be site specific and easy to

remember.

Although the benefits of online shopping are considerable, when the process goes poorly it can

create a thorny situation. A few problems that shoppers potentially face include identity theft,

faulty products, and the accumulation of spyware. If users are required to put in their credit card

information and billing/shipping address and the website is not secure, customer information

can be accessible to anyone who knows how to obtain it. Most large online corporations are

inventing new ways to make fraud more difficult. However, criminals are constantly responding

to these developments with new ways to manipulate the system. Even though online retailers

are making efforts to protect consumer information, it is a constant fight to maintain the lead. It

is advisable to be aware of the most current technology and scams protect consumer identity

and finances.

Product delivery is also a main concern of online shopping. Most companies offer shipping

insurance in case the product is lost or damaged. Some shipping companies will offer refunds or

compensation for the damage, but this is up to their discretion.

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2.3.2 Lack of full cost disclosure

The lack of full cost disclosure may also be problematic. While it may be easy to compare the

base price of an item online, it may not be easy to see the total cost up front. Additional fees

such as shipping are often not be visible until the final step in the checkout process. The

problem is especially evident with cross-border purchases, where the cost indicated at the final

checkout screen may not include additional fees that must be paid upon delivery such as duties

and brokerage. Some services such as the Canadian based Wishabi attempts to include

estimates of this additional cost, but nevertheless, the lack of general full cost disclosure

remains a concern.

2.3.3 Privacy

Privacy of personal information is a significant issue for some consumers. Many consumers

wish to avoid spam and telemarketing which could result from supplying contact information to

an online merchant. In response, many merchants promise to not use consumer information for

these purposes,

Many websites keep track of consumer shopping habits in order to suggest items and other

websites to view. Brick-and-mortar stores also collect consumer information. Some ask for a

shopper's address and phone number at checkout, though consumers may refuse to provide it.

Many larger stores use the address information encoded on consumers' credit cards (often

without their knowledge) to add them to a catalogue mailing list. This information is obviously

not accessible to the merchant when paying in cash or through a bank (money transfer, in which

case there is also proof of payment).

Impact of reviews on consumer behaviour

One of the great benefits of online shopping is the ability to read product reviews, written either

by experts or fellow online shoppers.

The Nielsen Company conducted a survey in March 2010 and polled more than 27,000 Internet

users in 55 markets from the Asia-Pacific, Europe, Middle East, North America, and South

America to look at questions such as "How do consumers shop online?", "What do they intend

to buy?", "How do they use various online shopping web pages?", and the impact of social

media and other factors that come into play when consumers are trying to decide how to spend

their money on which product or service. According to the research,[34] reviews on electronics

(57%) such as DVD players, cellphones, or PlayStations, and so on, reviews on cars (45%), and

reviews on software (37%) play an important role in influencing consumers who tend to make

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purchases online. Furthermore, 40% of online shoppers indicate that they would not even buy

electronics without consulting online reviews first.

In addition to online reviews, peer recommendations on online shopping pages or social media

websites play a key role for online shoppers when they are researching future purchases. 90%

of all purchases made are influenced by social media. Each day, over two million buyers are

shopping online for jewelry.

2.4 South Korean Supermarket Launches World’s First Virtual Store

A major South Korean retailer has opened what it appears to be the world's first virtual store

geared to smartphone users, with shoppers scanning barcodes of products displayed in a Seoul

subway station. Homeplus, the nation’s second largest discount chain, is offering 500 items

including food, electronics, office supplies and toiletries at its "store" at Seolleung station in the

south of the city of 10 million.

Seven pillars and six platform screen doors have been plastered with images of life-size store

shelves filled with goods -- such as milk, apples, a bag of rice or school backpacks -- which

each carry a small barcode. Shoppers download a related application on their smartphone and

make purchases by taking photos of the barcodes.

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You place an order when you go to work in the morning and can see the items delivered at

home when you come home at night," said a spokeswoman for Homeplus.

In fact, consumers don’t have to be anywhere near the virtual store. For example, if you want to

order replacements of a bottle of water that you have in your hand, you don’t have to stop by

the subway station. You simply scan the bottle’s barcode with the Homeplus app. The products

are delivered later to home or office.

Currently, only Android smartphone users will be able to use the service that launched last

week. Not that Homeplus hasn’t made an app iPhone, it’s just Steve Jobs and Co. hasn’t

approved it yet.

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2.4 (About Flipkart & Amazon)

Flipkart

Flipkart (Company) was founded in 2007 by Sachin Bansal and BinnyBansal, both alumni of

the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi. They had been working for Amazon.com previously.

The business was formally incorporated as a company in October 2008 as Online Services Pvt.

Ltd. During its initial years, Flipkart focused only on books, and soon as it expanded, it started

offering other products like electronic goods, air conditioners, air coolers, stationery supplies

and life style products and e-books. The first product sold by them was the book Leaving

Microsoft to Change the World, bought by VVK Chandra from Andhra Pradesh. Flipkart now

employs more than 15000 people. Flipkart allows payment methods such as cash on delivery,

credit or debit card transactions, net banking, e-gift voucher and card swipe on delivery

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Call us:

We're available 24 hours a day.

(0124) 6150000 or 1800 208 9898

Need assistance in buying?

Call our product experts 1800 1080 1800

Mail us:

Flipkart Internet Private Limited,

Ozone Manay Tech Park,

#56/18 & 55/09, 7th Floor,

Garvebhavipalya, Hosur Road,

Bangalore - 560068,

Karnataka, India.

Corporate Address:

Flipkart Internet Private Limited

Vaishnavi Summit, Ground Floor, 7th Main,

80 Feet Road, 3rd Block,

Koramangala Industrial Layout,

Bangalore - 560034

Karnataka, India

Ph: (0124) 6150000

Acquisitions

2010: WeRead, a social book discovery tool.

2011: Mime360, a digital content platform company.

2011: Chakpak.com, a Bollywood news site that offers updates news, photos and videos.

Flipkart acquired the rights to Chakpak's digital catalogue which includes 40,000 filmographies,

10,000 movies and close to 50,000 ratings. Flipkart has categorically said that it will not be

involved with the original site and will not use the brand name.

2012: Letsbuy.com, an Indian e-retailer in electronics. Flipkart has bought the company for an

estimated US$25 million. Letsbuy.com was closed down and all traffic to Lets buy has been

diverted to Flipkart.

2014: Acquired Myntra.com in an estimated INR 2,000 crore deal

Finance

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Initially, the founders had spent 400,000 only for making website to set up the business.

Flipkart has later raised funding from venture capital funds Accel India (US$1 million in 2009)

and Tiger Global (US$10 million in 2010 and US$20 million in June 2011). On 24 August

2012, Flipkart announced the completion of its 4th round of $150 million funding from MIH

(part of Naspers Group) and ICONIQ Capital. The company announced, on 10 July 2013, that it

has raised an additional $200 million from existing investors including Tiger Global, Naspers,

Accel Partners and Iconiq Capital. Flipkart's reported sales were 40 million in FY 2008–2009,

200 million in FY 2009–2010 and 750 million for FY 2010–2011.] In FY 2011–2012,

Flipkart is set to cross the 5 billion (US$100 million) mark as Internet usage in the country

increases and people get accustomed to making purchases online. Flipkart projects its sales to

reach 10 billion by year 2014. On average, Flipkart sells nearly 10 products per minute and is

aiming at generating a revenue of 50 billion (US$0.81 billion) by 2015.

On November 2012, Flipkart became one of the companies being probed for alleged violations

of FDI regulations of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999

Flipkart reported a loss of 281 crore for the FY 2012-13. In July 2013, Flipkart raised USD

160 million from private equity investors.[38]

In October 2013, it was reported that Flipkart had raised an additional $160 million from new

investors Dragoneer Investment Group, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, Sofina SA and

Vulcan Inc. with participation from existing investor Tiger Global.

On 26 May 2014, Flipkart announced that it has raised $210 million from Yuri Milner’s DST

Global and its existing investors Tiger Global, Naspers and Iconiq Capital.

In early July 2014, it was also highly speculated that Flipkart was in negotiations to raise at

least $500 million, for a likely listing in the US for 2016.

On 29 July 2014, Flipkart announced that it raised $1 billion from Tiger Global Management

LLC, Accel Partners, and Morgan Stanley Investment Managemnt and a new investor

Singapore sovereign-wealth fund GIC.

On 6 October 2014, Flipkart sold products worth INR 650Crore in 10 hours in a special one-

day event - "The Big Billion Day", claiming they had created e-commerce history, but their

hard-won reputation for good customer service suffered because of technical problems, and

angry reactions on social media from buyers disappointed with the pricing and availability of

products. It claimed to sell a whopping 5 lakh mobile handsets, five-lakh clothes and shoes and

25,000 television sets within hours of opening its discounted sale at 8 AM. In December 2014,

After it received $700 million from another funding, Flipkart had a market cap of $11 billion or

Rs.66000 crore

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On 20th December, 2014, Flipkart announced filing application with Singapore based

companies' regulator ACRA to become a public company after raising USD 700 million for

long term strategic investments in India following which its number of investors exceeded 50.

The USD 700 million fund raised by Flipkart added new investors - Baillie Gifford, Greenoaks

Capital, Steadview Capital, T. Rowe Price Associates and Qatar Investment Authority - on

company's board.Its existing investors DST Global, GIC, ICONIQ Capital and Tiger Global

also participated in this latest financing round

Awards and recognition

Co-Founder of Flipkart Sachin Bansal, got Entrepreneur of the Year Award 2012-2013 from

Economic Times, leading Indian Economic Daily[78]

Flipkart.com was awarded Young Turk of the Year at CNBC TV 18's 'India Business Leader

Awards 2012' (IBLA).[79]

Flipkart.com- got nominated for India MART Leaders of Tomorrow Awards 2011

Amazon

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Sales/

Revenue

34.2B 48.08B 61.09B 74.45B

Amazon and Snapdeal, all of them have raised investments or have commitments of $1

Billion or more. This money is being burned to acquire new customers, offer discounts and

pump up products on offer. While we are all aware that these sites are losing money, you will

be amazed to know the quantum of loss these ecommerce players have incurred.

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[Data Source: Techcircle] Note: All figures are in INR Crore

Please note that the revenue figures above are not the price of products sold (GMV), as these

are all marketplaces, and their revenues come from commissions they get from sellers or listing

fees that they charge to list the products on their site.

GMV or Gross Merchandize Value represents the price of products sold and net revenues

are just a fraction of that!

Flipkart leads the race with net revenue of 179 crore followed by Amazon at 168.9 crore and

Snapdeal at 154.11 crore.

However, when it comes to losses, Flipkart leads by a much bigger margin and their loss for

2013-14 stands at Rs. 400 Crore. Comparatively, Amazon losses are pegged at Rs. 321.3 crore

and Snapdeal had least losses of 3 with 264.6 crore

See the graph below to understand how much loss each player incurs for every rupee in net

revenues.

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Flipkart leads the race here to losing 2.23 rupees for every 1 rupee of revenue. Amazon loses

1.90 and Snapdeal has least amount of losses at Rs. 1.72.

http://indiafreestuff.in/top-10-online-shopping-sites-in-india-html/

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Ch.3 Theoretical Framework

3.1 Concept

The SERVQUAL service quality model was developed by a group of American authors, 'Parsu'

Parasuraman, Valarie Zeithaml and Len Berry, in 1985. It highlights the main components of

high quality service. The SERVQUAL authors originally identified ten elements of service

quality, but in later work, these were collapsed into five factors - reliability, assurance,

tangibles, empathy and responsiveness - that create the acronym RATER.

Businesses using SERVQUAL to measure and manage service quality deploy a questionnaire

that measures both the customer expectations of service quality in terms of these five

dimensions, and their perceptions of the service they receive. When customer expectations are

greater than their perceptions of received delivery, service quality is deemed low.

In additional to being a measurement model, SERVQUAL is also a management model. The

SERVQUAL authors identified five Gaps that may cause customers to experience poor service

quality.

Gap 1: between consumer expectation and management perception

This gap arises when the management does not correctly perceive what the customers want. For

instance, hospital administrators may think patients want better food, but patients may be more

concerned with the responsiveness of the nurse. Key factors leading to this gap are:

Insufficient marketing research

Poorly interpreted information about the audience's expectations

Research not focused on demand quality

Too many layers between the front line personnel and the top level management

Gap 2: between management perception and service quality specification

Although the management might correctly perceive what the customer wants, they may not set

an appropriate performance standard. An example would be when hospital administrators

instruct nurses to respond to a request ‘fast’, but may not specify ‘how fast’. Gap 2 may occur

due to the following reasons:

Insufficient planning procedures

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Lack of management commitment

Unclear or ambiguous service design

Unsystematic new service development process

Gap 3: between service quality specification and service delivery

This gap may arise through service personnel being poor training, incapable or unwilling to

meet the set service standard. The possible major reasons for this gap are:

Deficiencies in human resource policies such as ineffective recruitment, role ambiguity, role

conflict, improper evaluation and compensation system

Ineffective internal marketing

Failure to match demand and supply

Lack of proper customer education and training

Gap 4: between service delivery and external communication

Consumer expectations are highly influenced by statements made by company representatives

and advertisements. The gap arises when these assumed expectations are not fulfilled at the

time of delivery of the service. For example, the hospital printed on the brochure may have

clean and furnished rooms, but in reality it may be poorly maintained, in which case the

patients' expectations are not met. The discrepancy between actual service and the promised one

may occur due to the following reasons:

Over-promising in external communication campaign

Failure to manage customer expectations

Failure to perform according to specifications

Gap 5: between expected service and experienced service

This gap arises when the consumer misinterprets the service quality. For example, a physician

may keep visiting the patient to show and ensure care, but the patient may interpret this as an

indication that something is really wrong.

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http://www.marketing.org.au/images/cimages/fig%201.jpg

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Ch4. RESEARCHMETHODOLOGY

4.1 Need for Research

To survive in competitive market, it is mandatory for any organization to provide best services

to their customer. So, by doing research, the company will have an idea whether their customers

are satisfied or not in context of services provided by them.

4.2 Problem Statement

“A study on measuring the Service Quality of Virtual/online shopping.”

4.3 Research Objectives

4.3.1 Primary objectives:

To measure the Service Quality of Virtual shopping by applying SERVQUAL model

4.3.2 Secondary objectives:

1) To understand the theoretical aspects of SERVQUAL model

2) To measure the expected value of the customers with respect to services offered by the

organization

3) To measure the actual value of the customers with respect to services offered by the

organization

4) To identify the gap between the expected and actual value of the customers with respect to

services offered by the organization

5) To provide analysis of customer satisfaction and loyalty

4.4 Research Design

The research design adopted in this study was DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH DESIGN.

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4.5 Data collection Method

4.5.1. Primary data: The method of collection of primary data was direct personal interview

through a structured questionnaire.

4.5.2. Secondary Data: The information about company profile and theory of the study was

collected through secondary data.

4.6 Sampling

4.6.1. Population: the entire customer of Virtual shopping Surat city.

4.6.2. Sampling Method: Non probability convenience sampling method

4.6.3. Sampling size: 200 customers were surveyed through questionnaire.

4.7 Data collection Instrument

Questionnaire was used for this purpose of the data collection as the research instrument.

4.8 Data Analysis software

In this project we used the SPSS software as the data analysis technique.

4.9 Limitation

1) Different level of perception in the mind of respondents and researcher.

2) The research only considers five variables of Gap model. The result may change if other

variables are taken into consideration and may show better analysis.

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1) Analyses base on education

INTERPRETATION:

IT is cleared that majority of the respondent is graduated. And than least of the respondents are

post graduate.

2) Analyses base on occupation

Occupation

Frequency Percent Valid Percent Cumulative Percent

Valid Student 84 38.7 42.0 42.0

Business 79 36.4 39.5 81.5

Retired 37 17.1 18.5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Missing System 17 7.8

Total 217 100.0

INTERPRETATION:

IT is cleared that majority of the respondent are student and than least of the respondents are

retired person.

Department of Business and Industrial Management Page 45

Education

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Undergraduate 66 30.4 33.0 33.0

Graduate 73 33.6 36.5 69.5

Post Graduate 61 28.1 30.5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Missing System 17 7.8

Total 217 100.0

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3) Analyses base on Age

INTERPRETATION:

IT is cleared that majority of the respondent are under age of 20-30. And than least of the

respondents are above 60. Another second majority are under age of 31-40.

4) Analyses base on online shopping time period

How often do you shop online?

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Once in week 55 25.3 27.5 27.5

Once in month 77 35.5 38.5 66.0

Once in every 3 month 33 15.2 16.5 82.5

Once in every 6 months 15 6.9 7.5 90.0

Once in year 19 8.8 9.5 99.5

6 1 .5 .5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Total 200 100.0

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Age

Frequency Percent Valid Percent Cumulative Percent

Valid 20-30 123 56.7 61.5 61.5

31-40 62 28.6 31.0 92.5

41-50 6 2.8 3.0 95.5

51-60 4 1.8 2.0 97.5

>60 5 2.3 2.5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Missing System 17 7.8

Total 217 100.0

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INTERPRETATION:

IT is cleared that majority of the respondents are purchase once in month. And rest of the

respondents are purchase once in a week or every 3 months or 6 every 6 months or once in a

month.

5) How much you spent for online shopping per month?

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Upto 500 36 16.6 18.0 18.0

500-1000 65 30.0 32.5 50.5

1000-1500 39 18.0 19.5 70.0

1500-2000 27 12.4 13.5 83.5

>2000 32 14.7 16.0 99.5

6 1 .5 .5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Total 200 100.0

INTERPRETATION:

IT is cleared that majority of the respondents are spent 500-1000 Rs. Per month. And minority

of the respondents are spent 1500-2000 Rs. Per month.

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6) Analyses as per sites prefer by Respondent

Which sites you prefer more?

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Flipkart 36 16.6 18.0 18.0

Ebay 60 27.6 30.0 48.0

Amazon 34 15.7 17.0 65.0

Snapdeal 21 9.7 10.5 75.5

Naaptol 36 16.6 18.0 93.5

Othes 13 6.0 6.5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Total 200 100.0

INTERPRETATION:

IT is cleared that majority of the respondents are prefer ebay to shop online. And rest of the

respondents are prefer flipkart , amazon and others sites.

7) Analyses base on delivered product on time

Does they delivered product on time/promised time?

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Highly Satisfied 21 9.7 10.5 10.5

Satisfied 43 19.8 21.5 32.0

Satisfied but need

improvement42 19.4 21.0 53.0

Unsatisfied 30 13.8 15.0 68.0

Chances to lose customer 64 29.5 32.0 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

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INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondent have complain that they do not delivered product on

time. That means company have chances to lose their customer.

8) Analyses base on consumer on when they will provide the service

Are they informed the consumer on when they will provide the service?

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are highly satisfied means company provide

excellent service on informing when they provide the service/good.

Department of Business and Industrial Management Page 49

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Highly Satisfied 57 26.3 28.5 28.5

Satisfied 48 22.1 24.0 52.5

Satisfied but need

improvement37 17.1 18.5 71.0

Unsatisfied 32 14.7 16.0 87.0

Chances to lose customer 26 12.0 13.0 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Total 200 100.0

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9) Analyses base on provide safety / privacy in their transactions

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are satisfied means company provide good service

on providing safety/privacy in their transactions.

10) Analyses based on company understand the need of the customer

Department of Business and Industrial Management Page 50

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid

Highly Satisfied 54 24.9 27.0 27.0

Satisfied 64 29.5 32.0 59.0

Satisfied but need

improvement37 17.1 18.5 77.5

Unsatisfied 20 9.2 10.0 87.5

Chances to lose customer 25 11.5 12.5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Total 200 100.0

Does company understand the need of the customer?

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Highly Satisfied 27 12.4 13.5 13.5

Satisfied 43 19.8 21.5 35.0

Satisfied but need

improvement33 15.2 16.5 51.5

Unsatisfied 52 24.0 26.0 77.5

Chances to lose customer 45 20.7 22.5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Total 200 100.0

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INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are unsatisfied means company do not understand

the actual need of the consumer.

11) Analyses on company provide any mobile application for ios/anroid/windows

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are highly satisfied that means company provide

mobile application for ios, android and windows.

Department of Business and Industrial Management Page 51

Does company provide any mobile application for ios/anroid/windows??

Frequency Percent Valid Percent

Cumulative

Percent

Valid Highly Satisfied 107 49.3 53.5 53.5

Satisfied 22 10.1 11.0 64.5

Satisfied but need

improvement37 17.1 18.5 83.0

Unsatisfied 27 12.4 13.5 96.5

Chances to lose customer 7 3.2 3.5 100.0

Total 200 92.2 100.0

Total 200 100.0

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12) Cross tabulation ( Age & delivered product on time )

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are highly unsatisfied age between 20-30 that

means company do not delivered product on time/promised time.

13) Cross tabulation ( Age & provide product as shown on website)

Age * Does they provide product as shown on website?

Does they provide product as shown on website?

Total Satisfied

Satisfied but

need

improvement Unsatisfied

Highly

unsatisfied

Age 20-30 14 77 11 21 123

31-40 7 41 5 9 62

41-50 1 3 0 2 6

51-60 1 1 0 2 4

>60 0 2 3 0 5

Total 23 124 19 34 200

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Age * Does they delivered product on time/promised time?

Does they delivered product on time/promised time?

Total

Highly

Satisfied Satisfied

Satisfied but

need

improvement Unsatisfied

Highly

unsatisfied

Age 20-30 17 28 23 20 35 123

31-40 3 13 14 10 22 62

41-50 0 1 2 0 3 6

51-60 1 0 1 0 2 4

>60 0 1 2 0 2 5

Total 21 43 42 30 64 200

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INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are satisfied in age between 20-30 but they want

some improvement in their service.

14) Cross tabulation ( Age & past record about the services)

Age * company’s past record about the services are satisfying?

Companies past record about the services are satisfying?

Total

Highly

Satisfied Satisfied

Satisfied but

need

improvemen

t

Unsatisfie

d

Highly

unsatisfied

Age 20-30 16 43 33 14 17 123

31-40 8 23 6 11 14 62

41-50 0 0 2 2 2 6

51-60 1 1 2 0 0 4

>60 0 2 0 2 1 5

Total 25 69 43 29 34 200

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are satisfied age between 20-30 that Means

Company’s past record about the service are good.

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15) Cross tabulation ( Age & customer-care officer solving the problem)

Age * Does customer-care officer satisfying / solving the problem?

Does customer-care officer satisfying / solving the problem?

Total

Highly

Satisfied Satisfied

Satisfied

but need

improveme

nt

Unsatisfie

d

Highly

unsatisfied

Age 20-30 22 18 35 28 20 123

31-40 12 12 16 12 10 62

41-50 1 1 1 1 2 6

51-60 0 1 3 0 0 4

>60 3 0 0 2 0 5

Total 38 32 55 43 32 200

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are satisfied in age between 20-30 but they want

some improvement regarding this service.

16) Cross tabulation ( Occupation & provide safety / privacy in their transactions)

Occupation * Are they provide safety / privacy in their transactions?

Are they provide safety / privacy in their transactions?

Total

Highly

Satisfied Satisfied

Satisfied

but need

improveme

nt

Unsatisfi

ed

Highly

unsatisfied

Occupati

on

Student 25 25 16 10 8 84

Busines

s17 26 13 9 14 79

Retired 12 13 8 1 3 37

Total 54 64 37 20 25 200

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INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are satisfied in business group, which has been

closely followed by students.

17) Cross tabulation ( Occupation & employee of the company maintain their courtesy

when handling the customer )

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents are satisfied but they want some improvement

regarding handling the customer.

Department of Business and Industrial Management Page 55

Occupation * Does employee of the company maintain their courtesy when handling the

customer?

Does employee of the company maintain their courtesy when

handling the customer?

Total

highly

satiesfied satiesfied

satiesfied but

need

improvement

unsatiesfie

d

chances of

lossing the

customer

Occupatio

n

Student 7 17 31 16 13 84

Business 5 18 26 16 14 79

Retired 2 7 16 8 4 37

Total 14 42 73 40 31 200

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18) Cross tabulation (Education & informed the consumer on when they will provide

the service )

Education * Are they informed the consumer on when they will provide the service?

Are they informed the consumer on when they will provide the

service?

Total

Highly

Satisfied Satisfied

Satisfied but

need

improvement Unsatisfied

Highly

unsatisfied

Educatio

n

Undergraduat

e15 14 14 11 12 66

Graduate 25 17 11 11 9 73

Post

Graduate17 17 12 10 5 61

Total 57 48 37 32 26 200

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents who are in graduate group are highly satisfied.

That means company provide time to time information.

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19) Cross tabulation (Education & informed the consumer on when they will provide

the service )

Education * Are they willing to help customer? /ready to respond to consumer request?

Are they willing to help customer? /ready to respond to

consumer request?

Total

Highly

Satisfied

Satisfie

d

Satisfied

but need

improveme

nt Unsatisfied

Highly

unsatisfied

Education Undergrad

uate7 12 18 18 11 66

Graduate 12 17 23 8 13 73

Post

Graduate9 15 10 17 10 61

Total 28 44 51 43 34 200

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents who are in graduate group are satisfied. But they

need some improvement in helping the consumer.

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20) Cross tabulation (Education & Services provide by company are accurate / not )

INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents who are in undergraduate group are satisfied. But

they need some improvement for accurate services.

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Education * Services provide by company are accurate / not?

Services provide by company are accurate / not?

Total

Highly

Satisfied Satisfied

Satisfied but

need

improvemen

t

Unsatisfie

d

Highly

unsatisfied

Educatio

n

Undergradua

te8 12 25 9 12 66

Graduate 2 15 23 19 14 73

Post

Graduate6 9 21 15 10 61

Total 16 36 69 43 36 200

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21) Cross tabulation (Education & provide proper attention to new customer willing

to help)

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INTERPRETATION:

Table shows the majority of the respondents who are in graduate group are unsatisfied that

shows the company do not provide proper attention to new consumer.

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Education * Are they provide proper attention to new customer willing to help?

Are they provide proper attention to new customer willing to

help?

Total

Highly

Satisfied Satisfied

Satisfied

but need

improveme

nt

Unsatisfie

d

Highly

unsatisfied

Educatio

n

Undergradu

ate4 11 14 22 15 66

Graduate 5 13 15 25 15 73

Post

Graduate4 12 10 21 14 61

Total 13 36 39 68 44 200

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Ch.6 Finding

In this research it has been found that maximum numbers of users are graduate with 36.5% share and post graduate are the least using people with 30.5% share while under graduate contribute 33%.

It has been found that students make maximum use of e-commerce for shopping while retired/ old age person uses it least.

38.5% people use e-commerce once in a month and 9.5% once in year. While 27.5% uses it once in a week.

Majority of the online shopping users are in the age group between 20-30 year with 61.5%.

32% people spend between 500-100Rs. While 13% spends between 1500-2000Rs.

The leading online shops are as follow:

EBAY with 30% FLIPKART with 18% AMAZONE with 17% SNAPDEAL with 10.5%

32% people told that the delivery of the product has not been done on time. So there are chances of losing those customer.

Out of 200 people 57 people are highly satisfied as far as the information to the consumer during the delivery of the product.

In this study it is found that most of the people using online shopping are feels safe during payment transaction.

It is found that most people prefer cash on delivery option for payment of product which they purchased for safety purpose.

Most of the online retail shops providing mobile application for IOS / ANROID/ WINDOWS.

In this study it is found that the customer care officers have enough knowledge which increases the efficiency to solve the problem of the customer.

In the study it has been found that the product has been safely delivered by Logistics Company to the customer.

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In research it is found that the needs of the customer are not satisfied by the online retail shops.

The online shops do maintain their past records which is very much satisfying.

Most of the people say that they are satisfied but still there is need of improvement while handling the new customer.

The various facilities like EMI / COD / ONLINE PAYMENT is very much useful and convenient for the customer.

In the research it is found that the online shops inform the customer about if any problem occurs regarding any service or purchases the product.

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Ch.7.CONCLUSION

The most important thing is responsiveness and empathy. From this research, we have found

that there is a positive gap in these variables. This means that responsiveness and empathy

is better than the expected level.

Reliability is also a factor that is important as far as investment is considered. Whenever a

expert gives advice for particular investment, his investment should prove to be profitable.

Thus its necessary that the advise is reliable. In this research it is found that there is negative

gap In this variable. This shows their weakness

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Ch. 8. Bibliography

http://indiafreestuff.in/top-10-online-shopping-sites-in-india-html/ (2nd feb 2015)http://www.voanews.com/content/south-korean-supermarket-launches-worlds-first-virtual-store-130839928/168053.html (2nd feb 2015)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_shopping (2nd feb 2015)http://www.amazon.co.uk/Virtual-History-Alternatives-Counte-Counterfactuals/dp/0465023231 (3rd march2015)http://www.anblik.com/list-of-top-30-online-ecommerce-shopping-sites-in-india/ (3rd march 2015)http://www.flipkart.com/?sitevariant=mobile (3rd march 2015)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_store_research (3rd march 2015)https://www.google.co.in/search?q=history+of+virtual+shopping&biw=1024&bih=631&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=t2HOVLTnCIa58gWq_4CwCg&ved=0CEkQsAQ (3rd march 2015)reference book:14th edition marketing management by Philip kotler

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ANNEXUREDear Sir/Madam,I am Achal Patel, student of Department of Business & Industrial Management, VNSGU,

Surat. I am conducting a research on “A study on measuring the Service Quality of

Virtual/ Online shopping.” ensure that your responses or other information are not used

for any other purpose than academic only.

Thanking you.

1. Name: _____________________________________

2. Education: undergraduate graduate post graduate

3. Occupation: student business retired working professional

4. Age: 20-30 31-40 41-50 51-60 >60

5. How often do you shop online?

Once in week once in a month once in every3year once in every 6months once in year

6. How much you spent for online shopping per month? Up to 500 500-1000 1000-1500 1500-2000 >2000

7. Which sites you prefer more?Flipkart ebay amazon snapdeal naaptol others

8. Rate the following variables based on importance of it (1= Strongly disagree, 5= Strongly agree)

No Statements

Expected Value Actual Value1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5

1 Does they delivered product on time/promised time?                    

2Does they provide product as shown on website?                    

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3How convenient their payment service COD / EMI / ONLINE?                    

4

Product shown on page and what consumer get actual when they delivered the product?                    

5Does company understand the need of the customer?                    

6company’s past record about the services are satisfying?                    

7 Does they provide proper attention to consumer while handling problem?                    

8

Does customer care officer’s behaviour/attitude towards you are good?                    

9Are they keep their records accurately/safely?                    

10Does customer-care officer have enough knowledge?                    

11Are they informed the consumer on when they will provide the service?                    

12Does the logistics company provide product safely?                    

13Does customer-care officer satisfying / solving the problem?                    

14

Are they willing to help customer? /ready to respond to consumer request?                    

15Are they provide safety / privacy in their transactions?                    

16

Does employee of the company maintain their courtesy when handling the customer?                    

17Services provide by company are accurate / not?                    

18 How accurate/real product visualise?                    

19 Does company provide any mobile application for ios/anroid/windows??                    

20Are they provide proper attention to new customer willing to help?                    

21Are they informed if any problem occurred?                    

22

Does customer care identify/satisfy customer’s problem after sales service?                    

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