privacy, consumer privacy, direct marketing, privacy trade-offs, personal information The authors examine potential relationships among categories of personal information, beliefs about direct marketing, situational characteristics, specific privacy concerns, and consumers’ direct marketing shopping habits. Furthermore, the authors offer an assessment of the trade-offs consumers are willing to make when they exchange personal information for shopping benefits. The findings indicate that public policy and self-regulatory efforts to alleviate consumer privacy concerns should provide consumers with more control over the initial gathering and subsequent dissemination of personal information. Such efforts must also consider the type of information sought, because consumer concern and willingness to provide marketers with personal data vary dramatically by information type. Author(s): Joseph Phelps 1 | Glen Nowak 2 | Elizabeth Ferrell 3 1. Associate Professor and Reese Phifer Professor of Advertising and Public Relations, Department of Advertising and Public Relations, College of Communications, University of Alabama 2. Associate professor, Department of Advertising and Public Relations, College of Journalism, University of Georgia 3. Assistant professor, School of Business Administration, Southwestern Oklahoma State University 1.  | How consumers value online personalization: a longitudinal experiment. Pauline de Pechpeyrou. Direct Marketing: An International Journal | Volume: 3 | Issue: 1 | Pps: 35-51 CrossRef |
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