Development of a survey instrument to examine consumer adoption of broadband

Yogesh Kumar Dwivedi, Jyoti Choudrie, Willem-Paul Brinkman. Development of a survey instrument to examine consumer adoption of broadband. Industrial Management and Data Systems, 106(5):700-718, 2006. [doi]

Abstract

Purpose – To describe the development of a survey instrument designed to measure consumer perceptions of the broadband adoption within the UK households.

Design/methodology/approach – A survey research approach was employed to achieve overall aim and following three objectives of this research: to identify initial items that may help to explain the broadband adoption behaviour and determine them employing an exploratory survey approach; to confirm the representativeness of items to a particular construct domain employing content validity approach; and finally, to test the instrument in order to confirm the reliability of items and construct validity.

Findings – The final outcome of the instrument development process that culminated from the confirmatory study was a parsimonious, 39-item instrument, consisting of ten scales, all with acceptable levels of content validity, reliability and construct validity.

Practical implications – The developed instrument is relevant to both academic and practitioner communities who hold a particular interest in the study and management of broadband adoption from the household consumer perspective.

Originality/value – The most conspicuous contribution of the paper is to provide a reliable instrument that is fundamental to measure the household consumer’s perceptions of adopting broadband internet.