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Dive into the research topics where Kwabena G. Boakye is active.

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Featured researches published by Kwabena G. Boakye.


The Quality Management Journal | 2014

UCPERF: An Urgent Care Patient Satisfaction Instrument

Hong Qin; Victor R. Prybutok; Daniel A. Peak; Kwabena G. Boakye

This study creates an urgent care (UC) service quality model and contextualizes a version of SERVPERF called UCPERF. In doing so, UCPERF fills a research void by examining how the service quality constructs measure healthcare patient satisfaction within an urgent care environment. Findings indicate that UCPERF is an equally effective version of the SERVPERF model; however, unlike SERVPERF, UCPERF yields a model targeted for patient satisfaction and contextualized for use in an urgent care environment. The authors believe that UCPERF allows quick assessment of competitive issues for patients and can allow greater satisfaction with service quality, which reduces the likelihood of switching healthcare providers.


International Journal of Bank Marketing | 2012

College students’ consumption of credit cards

Charles Blankson; Audhesh K. Paswan; Kwabena G. Boakye

Purpose – The importance of and viability of the college student cohort for credit card firms and banks are well documented and so are the challenges facing marketers interested in this target market. The first purpose of this paper is to examine college students’ motivation for consuming credit cards and the usefulness of the latter to them. The second purpose relies on marketing scholars’ advice by replicating and then validating an extant scale that measures college students’ decision criteria for credit cards. Specifically, the paper attempts to answer two questions: what is the compelling reason for a college student to want to own and use a credit card? In addition, how important is the credit card to the college student?Design/methodology/approach – The authors adopted the classical multi‐step scale development procedure, which demands that thorough attention is paid to every step of the process. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used to assess the reliability and validity of the re...


Journal of Computer Information Systems | 2018

Toward an Integrated Decision-Making Model for Consumer Electronic

Kwabena G. Boakye; Chung-Yean Chiang; Xiao Tang

ABSTRACT The study proposes an integrated comprehensive consumer decision-making model by extending the customer value, satisfaction, and loyalty framework to include customer experience as an antecedent to creating value and enhancing satisfaction toward technology continuance intention. Our study incorporates perspectives from information systems (IS) and service marketing, where customer value (hedonic and utilitarian) theory and literature on customer experience with perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness as its dimensions are found to be drivers of technology continuance intention for consumer electronics. In addition, partial least squares results from 370 smartphone users indicate that within consumer electronics, price negatively moderates the relationship between utilitarian value and satisfaction but not with hedonic value and satisfaction. Contributions of findings and implications are discussed to provide references for consumer electronic firms in IS and service marketing.


Journal of Computer Information Systems | 2018

Turnover Intention of Technology Professionals: A Social Exchange Theory Perspective

Gina Harden; Kwabena G. Boakye; Sherry D. Ryan

ABSTRACT Retaining skilled professionals is a critical concern for organizations because employee turnover can affect the quality of service provided by the organization and create considerable expense. Using a framework of social exchange theory, this study develops a model to investigate the interrelationships between turnover intentions, organizational commitment, and constructs of particular importance to information technology (IT) professionals. Field survey data from a large US federal agency empirically test these associations. The results confirm that IT professionals’ perceptions of their skill obsolescence, work overload, and the fairness of the rewards they receive directly influence their organizational commitment. Furthermore, their organizational commitment, perceived work overload, and fairness of rewards significantly affect turnover intention. Employees’ commitment toward the organization is an essential mediator between the perception that their skills are becoming obsolete and intention to leave the organization. Implications of these results for literature and practice are discussed.


International Journal of Quality & Reliability Management | 2017

An assessment of national healthcare service delivery: a Ghanaian illustration

Kwabena G. Boakye; Charles Blankson; Victor R. Prybutok; Hong Qin

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to propose and test a healthcare framework of service quality, perceived value, and satisfaction in Ghana. More specifically, this study investigates the role and effect of service quality on patient satisfaction and perceived value in Ghana’s healthcare delivery. Design/methodology/approach Data were gathered through surveys administered to 113 healthcare patients in Ghana. partial least square-structural equation modeling analysis was used to empirically test the research model. Findings Results show healthcare quality significantly influences satisfaction and perceived value of healthcare delivery. Additionally, perceived value’s impact on satisfaction and behavioral intention shows that increasing perceived benefits while reducing perceived costs leads to repeat behavior and paves the way for retention strategy for healthcare management. Research limitations/implications This study yields a series of limitations in its results and conclusions. These limitations and future research are discussed in Section 7 of the study. Originality/value This study contributes to the literature by examining the effects of healthcare service quality on patient satisfaction and perceived value, determining the effect of healthcare service quality on patients’ behavioral intention, and testing the proposed framework in Ghana, a fast growing and economically liberalized emerging country in Sub-Saharan Africa.


Journal of Computer Information Systems | 2017

The Investigation of E-Learning System Design Quality on Usage Intention

Chung-Yean Chiang; Kwabena G. Boakye; Xiao Tang

ABSTRACT A well-designed product increases customer value and leads to repeat usage. However, studies on the impact of website quality on customer usage fail to distinguish website competence from website capability, ignoring that website quality performance has impacts on other website quality attributes. We gather data from 314 undergraduate students and apply partial least square method to examine the design quality mechanisms and other factors that influence users’ experience. Our results indicate that offering personalized products or services is an important enabler toward enhancing users’ attitude and usage intention. Particularly, for IS education in the format of e-learning, our results suggest firms developing textbook technology platforms primarily focus on creating superior quality designs leading to capabilities that enhance user customization. The customization experience will lead to better satisfaction via both perceived usefulness and perceived ease-of-use.


International Journal of Information and Operations Management Education | 2013

Facility location with adjacent units: a simple approximation scheme

Shailesh S. Kulkarni; Hakan Tarakci; Kwabena G. Boakye; Subramaniam Ponnaiyan; Matthew Lasuzzo

In this paper, we provide a simple approximation scheme for the optimal objective value for a particular type of location problem. Typically, such problems are solved using the classic set covering formulation. Such a formulation automatically requires data for the constraint matrix and can get too large to implement or too difficult to solve to optimality. The scheme presented in this paper has minimal need for such data. Based on a simple count and with some basic and realistic assumptions about the geometry of the problem, we provide an algebraic formula that gives a close approximation to the optimal objective function value. Our formula can be easily implemented in a spreadsheet or hand-held calculator making it an effective planning tool for practice and also a good pedagogical aid. We illustrate by applying it to a location problem involving individual states in the continental US and collectively to the entire country.


Operations Management Research | 2012

The intention of continued web-enabled phone service usage: A quality perspective

Kwabena G. Boakye; Victor R. Prybutok; Sherry D. Ryan


The Quality Management Journal | 2012

The Attraction of the Sizzle: A Service Investment Model

Kwabena G. Boakye; Junhyuk Kwon; Charles Blankson; Victor R. Prybutok


Archive | 2015

Key Determinants of National Development: Historical Perspectives and Implications for Developing Economies

Kwaku Appiah-Adu; Charles Blankson; Kwabena G. Boakye

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Chung-Yean Chiang

Georgia Southern University

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Gina Harden

University of North Texas

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Sherry D. Ryan

University of North Texas

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Thomas McGinnis

Grand Valley State University

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Xiao Tang

Georgia Southern University

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Alaa Al Beayeyz

University of North Texas

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Chao Wen

Eastern Illinois University

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