Does the customer-firm relationship affect consumer recovery expectations?
Ma, Jun
INTRODUCTION
In the past century, exchanges of tangible goods dominated
business- and customer-based relationships. After entering the
twenty-first century, the marketing concept evolved into a new dominant
logic (Vargo & Lusch, 2004), also called the service-dominant logic
(Vargo & Lusch, 2008). According to the service-dominant logic, the
fundamental unit of exchange is the application of specialized skills
and knowledge. Goods are considered only the distribution mechanisms for
service provisions. Likewise, the customer is always considered a
co-producer. The service dominant logic focuses on the customer-firm
relationship.
Once the importance of forming the relationship with customers is
realized, companies design various forms of loyalty programs to build
the customer-firm relationship. Since service is essentially the
exchange between business and customer, providing a customer with a
satisfied experience is the key to building loyal relationships between
the service provider and the customer. Quality relationships can bring
about many advantages for service providers such as increased
profitability, reduced service cost, and increase in positive
word-of-mouth advertising (Ostrowski, O'Brien, & Gordon, 1993;
Terrill & Middlebrooks, 2000). However, one characteristic of any
service is that it involves human endeavor and that "zero
defect" is virtually impossible. Once a service failure occurs, a
service recovery provides organizations with an opportunity to resolve
the problems that led to the service failure in the first place. As
such, a service recovery strategy is a significant determinant of
customer satisfaction and loyalty (Mattila, 2001; Maxham &
Netemeyer, 2002; McCollough, 1995).
In order to recover appropriately from a service failure, service
providers must be able to understand consumer recovery expectations.
Previous studies have identified several antecedents of consumer
recovery expectations such as consumer-perceived quality and customer
organizational commitment (Kelley & Davis, 1994), severity of
failure and service guarantee (Craighead, Karwan, & Miller, 2004;
Hess, Ganesan, & Klein, 2003; Miller, Craighead, & Karwan,
2000), and attribution of failure (Hess et al., 2003). This study is
focused on identifying various forms of relationship between the firm
and the customer, and identifying various forms of relationships that
affect consumer recovery expectations.
LITERATURE REVIEW
Expectation-Disconfirmation Paradigm in the Service Failure and
Recovery Context
The expectancy-disconfirmation paradigm is probably the most
recognized model in consumer behavior literature for understanding
customer satisfaction/dissatisfaction (Bearden & Teel, 1983; Oliver,
1980, 1981, 1993; Oliver & Bearden, 1985; Swan & Trawick, 1981).
The expectancy-disconfirmation paradigm states that consumers compare
their prior expectations to post-performance perceptions (Bearden &
Teel, 1983; Churchill, 1982; Oliver, 1980). Disconfirmation strongly
determines consumer satisfaction. Even though support for the
disconfirmation model is mixed, no study has shown convincing evidence
to reject disconfirmation as a general model of customer
satisfaction/dissatisfaction. It is generally agreed that
disconfirmation is an antecedent of consumer
satisfaction/dissatisfaction.
In service encounters involving failure and recovery, the service
encounter satisfaction should include disconfirmation and expectations
in both failure and recovery phases. Therefore, there are two sets of
disconfirmation in failure/recovery encounters. Service encounter
satisfaction is determined not only by the disconfirmation of service
performance (failure), but also by the disconfirmation of service
recovery (Smith & Bolton, 1998). In the first phase of service
delivery, consumers hold pre-consumption expectations of service
performance, and compare the perceived performance with their
expectations. In the recovery phase of service encounters, consumers
evaluate redress efforts against their expectations of appropriate
recovery efforts, which results in a second disconfirmation judgment
(Oliver, 1981). This is termed "secondary satisfaction" and is
combined with the original dissatisfaction in order to determine
customers' overall satisfaction toward a service encounter. Singh
and Widing (1991) suggest that service encounter satisfaction should be
determined by consumers' perception of recovery efforts and their
recovery expectations. Thus, recovery expectations should be modeled as
a separate factor for service encounter satisfaction. Factors that
affect recovery expectations should also be identified to help service
providers to make recovery decisions for service failures.
Antecedents of Service Recovery Expectations
Several studies have examined antecedents of customer service
recovery expectations. Kelley and Davis (1994) proposed that
consumer-perceived service quality and customer organizational
commitment are the determinants of consumer recovery expectations. In
their study, organizational commitment is defined as an
individual's identification with and involvement in an organization
(Kelley & Davis, 1994). In addition to consumer-perceived service
quality and customer organizational commitment, severity of failure and
service guarantee were also identified as antecedents of service
recovery expectations (Craighead et al., 2004; Miller et al., 2000).
Hess et al. (2003) also found that consumer attribution of service
failure affects consumer recovery expectations.
The aforementioned studies commonly agree that consumer
organizational commitment is a factor that affects consumer recovery
expectations (Craighead et al., 2004; Hess et al., 2003; Kelley &
Davis, 1994; Miller et al., 2000). Consumers who have a strong
commitment to an organization expect the relationship to be maintained.
They are more likely to anticipate impressive responses to service
failures as a means of maintaining the equity of the
customer-organization relationship.
However, in aforementioned studies, consumer organizational
commitment is operationalized as a unidimensional construct. These
studies did not distinguish between different types of commitment with
service providers, and the manner in which these different types of
commitment affect consumer recovery expectations. Consumers choose to be
committed to a service organization for different reasons. It is
possible that consumers will have different levels of recovery
expectations if they have different types of relationships with service
providers.
HYPOTHESES DEVELOPMENT
Commitment
Commitment is an important concept that has been studied in various
disciplines such as the interpersonal relationship in sociology,
organizational commitment in management, and buyer-seller relationship
in marketing. In relationship marketing, consumer commitment leads to
various types of loyal behaviors, which further benefit organizations in
terms of profitability (Garbarino & Johnson, 1999; Gundlach, Achrol,
& Mentzer, 1995; Morgan & Hunt, 1994; Pritchard, Havitz, &
Howard, 1999).
Morgan and Hunt (1994) define relationship commitment as "an
exchange partner believing that an ongoing relationship with another is
so important as to warrant maximum efforts at maintaining it; that is,
the committed party believes the relationship is worth working on to
ensure that it endures indefinitely" (p. 23). Increasingly,
marketing scholars recognize the multifaceted nature of commitment.
Building on theories in organizational behavior, many marketing studies
borrowed the structure of commitment from Allen and Meyer (1990), and
treated commitment as a multidimensional construct (Brown, Lusch, &
Nicholson, 1995; Fullerton, 2003; Gruen, Summers, & Acito, 2000;
Gundlach et al., 1995; Harrison-Walker, 2001; Kim & Frazier, 1997;
Kumar, Scheer, & Steenkamp, 1995). Based on Allen and Meyer (1990),
there are at least three types of commitment in employment
relationships: affective, continuance, and normative. Affective
commitment refers to an affective or emotional attachment to the
organization. Continuance commitment "is viewed as a tendency to
'engage in consistent lines of activity' based on the
individual's recognition of the 'cost' (or lost
side-bets) associated with discontinuing the activity" (Allen &
John, 1990). The least common is normative commitment, which is viewed
as a belief about one's responsibility to an organization.
In the customer-service provider relationship, affective commitment
and continuance commitment are more salient than normative commitment
when such a relationship is based on the exchange rather than employment
relationship. Consumers are less likely to assume any responsibility to
a service provider. Affective and continuance commitment also appear
more in marketing studies than does normative commitment (Fullerton,
2003; Kumar et al., 1995).
Affective Commitment and Consumer Recovery Expectations
In this study, affective commitment is defined as an affective or
emotional attachment to the service provider. The affective commitment
represents an enduring desire to maintain a valued relationship (Morgan
& Hunt, 1994). Such emotions or attachment are built on trust
(Morgan & Hunt, 1994; Pritchard et al., 1999; Sargeant & Lee,
2004). In explaining the relationship between trust and commitment,
Gabarino and Johnson (1999) stated that "Because commitment
involves potential vulnerability and sacrifice, it follows that people
are unlikely to be committed unless trust is already established"
(p. 73). Building trust between customers and service providers requires
service providers to provide high-quality services (Caceres &
Paparoidamis, 2007; Chiou & Droge, 2006). In other words, service
quality affects affective commitment. Customers are affectively
committed to a service provider when they believe that the service
provider has the ability to perform the promised service dependably and
accurately, is willing to help customers, provides prompt service, has
knowledgeable employees who can inspire trust and confidence, and cares
about and provides individualized attention to customers (Parasuraman,
Zeithaml, & Berry, 1988). Therefore, if a service failure occurs,
customers will expect the service provider to promptly take action to
fix the problem. Therefore,
Hypothesis 1: Affective commitment is positively related to
consumer recovery expectations.
Continuance Commitment and Consumer Recovery Expectations
Continuance commitment is defined as the degree to which a customer
is psychologically bonded to a service provider on the basis of the
perceived costs associated with switching service provider (Gruen et
al., 2000). From an economist's view, consumers enter the exchange
relationship and choose to be committed to the relationship with the
service provider because of utilitarian principles. Consumers'
motivation to be committed is to seek an optimization of some
deterministic utility function. In other words, the consumer is
committed to the firm to avoid potential risks such as high switching
cost (Aydin & Ozer, 2006; Bell, Auh, & Smalley, 2005; Burnham,
Frels, & Mahajan, 2003; Caruana, 2004; Lam, Shankar, Erramilli,
& Murthy, 2004; Lee, Lee, & Feick, 2001; Neeru & Paul, 2000;
Ruyter, Martin, & Josee, 1998; Yang & Peterson, 2004).
Continuance commitment, which is attributed to high switching cost,
dependence, and lack of choice, is more likely to create feelings of
dependence and entrapment (Fullerton, 2003), which will lead to loyal
firm behavior (Fullerton, 2003; Gruen et al., 2000).
Service failure in a service encounter, based on an
economist's view, is defined as "cost" or
"loss" to the customer in the form of money or time.
Therefore, the subsequent recovery actions taken by the organization
would be treated as "value" or "gain" to the
customer's overall utility function. The "cost" or
"loss" caused by service failure should lead to switching
behavior if continuance commitment does not exist. Due to the high
switching cost and/or lack of choice, the consumer would expect the
service provider to restore "the justice" between the exchange
parties (Smith, Bolton, & Wagner, 1999). To continue the
relationship with the service provider, the committed customers are more
likely to have higher recovery expectations.
Hypothesis 2: Continuance commitment is positively related to
consumer recovery expectations.
Interpersonal Relationship with Service Employees and Consumer
Recovery Expectations
One type of relationship between service providers and customers is
customers' interpersonal relationship with service employees. This
type of interpersonal relationship could be attributed to social bond
(Bendapudi & Berry, 1997), which is different from business-customer
relationships. This type of interpersonal relationship allows service
providers and customers to share a general sense of the content of what
they label commercial friendship, for which affection, intimacy, and
loyalty constitute the substance of these friendships. However, whether
this type of relationship is good for a business remains to be
established. Previous studies have shown differing results. For example,
Guenzi and Pelloni (2004) found that customer-to-employee relationship
closeness promotes overall customer satisfaction and behavioral loyalty.
However, Grayson (2007) found that combining friendship and the business
relationship can also create conflict. This conflict is caused by
incompatible relational expectations. Further, Grayson (2007) concludes
that friendship can have both positive and negative influences on
business. Hansen, Sandvik, and Selnes (2003) also examined the impact of
the interpersonal relationship between customers and service employees
on customer intention to stay. They suggested that such personal
commitment is the antecedent of commitment to service firms.
Nevertheless, commitment to service employees also leads to loyal
behaviors (Hansen et al., 2003).
What is not clear is whether the interpersonal relationship and
commitment to service employees will lead to forgiveness when a service
failure occurs. Building on interdependence theory, this article
provides evidence to help understand consumers' reaction to service
failures if the customer has a close relationship with service
employees.
Interdependence theory states that reactions to the close
relationship depend on two matrices: given matrix and effective matrix
(Kelley & Thibaut, 1978). The given matrix represents partners'
feelings about the joint outcomes. According to the norm of reciprocity
viewpoint, given matrix leads to a similar action resulting in a
destructive act (Gouldner, 1960). Social exchange theory also suggests
that individuals who are involved in an exchange relationship obtain not
only economic benefits but also social benefits, including esteem,
respect, friendship, and love (Foa, Tornblorn, Foa, & John Converse,
1973; Thibaut & Kelley, 1959).
Based on interdependence theory, a close interpersonal relationship
between customers and service employees may lead to a high level of
consumer recovery expectation because consumers devoted not only
economic efforts but also social efforts to the relationship. Therefore,
Hypothesis 3a: The closeness of the interpersonal relationship
between customers and service employees is positively related to
consumer recovery expectations.
However, the given matrix is only part of the interdependence
theory. An individual does not necessarily behave according to the given
matrix. The other matrix introduced in interdependence theory (mentioned
earlier), the effective matrix, represents feelings about joint outcomes
at the time that partners actually react to the situation. In such a
close relationship, an individual's primitive impulse may be
reacting destructively in turn, but she or he may consider the situation
and decide not to react destructively toward the relationship. The
effective matrix is the theoretical foundation of interpersonal
forgiveness (McCullough, Worthington Jr., & Rachal, 1997). Rusbult
and Verette (Rusbult & Verette, 1991) called it
"accommodation". Rusbult and Verette (1991) also found that
the less social concern a person has, and less interdependent the
relationship is, the lower the willingness to accommodate will be.
Further, partners' relationship satisfaction, overall relational
functioning, and commitment to the relationship also promote forgiveness
between partners (Rusbult & Verette, 1991). McCollough et al. (1997)
defined interpersonal forgiveness as "a set of motivational changes
that a person may become (1) decreasingly motivated to retaliate against
an offending relationship partner, (b) decreasingly motivated to
maintain estrangement from the offender, and (c) increasingly motivated
by conciliation and goodwill for the offender, despite the
offender's hurtful actions" (p. 321). Additionally, they
proposed that empathy also facilitates forgiveness for the offending
partner because empathy incorporates concepts such as sympathy,
compassion, and tenderness (Batson, 1991; Batson & Shaw, 1991).
Based on the given matrix, a customer's first reaction to a
service failure should boost a high level of recovery expectation.
However, due to the closeness of the interpersonal relationship between
the customer and service employee(s), the customer may consider other
factors, such as the long-term relationships and affective commitment
with service employee(s), and reduce the expectation of service
recovery. Therefore, the competing hypothesis is:
Hypothesis 3b: The closeness of the interpersonal relationship
between customers and service employees is negatively related to
consumer recovery expectations.
METHODOLOGY
Data Collection and Procedure
This study utilized the survey approach to investigate the impact
of customer relationship with service providers on consumer recovery
expectations. Students from an undisclosed Midwest university were
recruited to participate in the survey. The students were asked to
record a detailed service encounter that occurred recently. They then
subsequently evaluated their satisfaction level relating to that
particular service encounter. Next, the students answered a series of
questions regarding their relationship with that particular service
provider, including their affective commitment, continuance commitment,
and interpersonal relationship with employees of the service provider.
At the end, the students were asked about their recovery expectation if
a service failure occurs.
A total of 617 usable service encounters were collected. The
students answered all questions regarding their relationship with that
particular service provider.
Measurement of Variables
Affective commitment, continuance commitment, and closeness to
service employees were measured in this study as independent variables.
Consumer recovery expectation for service failure was measured as the
dependent variable. Affective commitment was measured with three items
adapted from Verhoef, Franses, and Hoekstra (2002). Continuance
commitment was measured with three items adapted from Allen and Meyer
(1990). The closeness to service employees was measured with three items
previously employed by Guenzi and Pelloni (2004). Consumer recovery
expectations for service failures were measured with three items
employed by Hess et al. (2003). Table 1 provides the measures used in
this study along with the scale reliabilities. All scales show
acceptable reliabilities, ?>.80 (Nunnally, 1978). All items were
measured on a 7-point Likert scale.
Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to evaluate the
measures. The confirmatory factor analysis was completed with maximum
likelihood estimation. The measurement model offered an acceptable fit
to the data (?2 = 170.262; df = 48; p<.05; AGFI = .930; CFI = .983;
RMSEA = .065). Item factor loadings, composite reliability, and average
variance extracted (AVE) from the confirmatory factor analysis are also
shown in Table 1.
Tables 1 and 2 provide support for discriminant and convergent
validity of the study constructs. Without exception, the estimated
loadings are large and significant (t-values >8, p<.05). All
composite reliabilities are above .80, exceed .70, the commonly used
norm for acceptable psychometrics. All constructs provide evidence of
acceptable discriminant validity. The highest intercorrelation among the
composites in Table 2 is .699, indicating that no two constructs share
more than 49% of their variance.
RESULTS
The hypotheses were tested using the Structural Equation Modeling
approach. The SEM model allows us to account for the error terms of the
measurements of continuous variables. The hypothesized model moderately
fit the data shown in Figure 1 (?2 = 860.35, df = 51, CFI = .886, AGFI =
.719, RMSEA = .161). All hypothesized paths were significant at the .05
level.
The results from SEM analysis show that affective commitment and
continuance commitment have a positive impact on service recovery
expectations (?ac = .108, ?cc = .092), which support hypotheses 1 and 2.
The closeness between customers and service employees also has a
positive impact on service recovery expectations (?ce = .093), which
supports hypothesis 3a. In other words, even though the consumer may
develop, to a certain extent, an interpersonal relationship with service
employees, they still expect the firm to recover their loss due to the
failure.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
In the service-dominant economy, customer satisfaction is the focus
of service organizations. However, service encounters involve human
endeavors and service failures often occur. Service recovery becomes an
important strategy to keep the customer satisfied. Based on the
expectancy-disconfirmation paradigm, understanding and gauging customer
recovery expectations is necessary in order to implement an appropriate
recovery strategy. In addition to factors identified by previous
studies, which may affect customer recovery expectations, we examine how
various forms of customer relationships with service providers affect
consumer recovery expectations. The results provide strong evidence that
suggests that service providers need to make a decision concerning
whether they should prioritize customers when recovering a service
failure.
The results of this study show that consumers who have a higher
level of affective commitment and continuance commitment will have a
higher recovery expectation after a failure occurs. Even though
consumers may develop a certain interpersonal relationship or friendship
with service employees, they still expect the firm to recover their loss
created by the failure. A closer relationship between the customer and
the service employees will lead to higher recovery expectations on the
part of the customer. This is also intuitively appealing, as the
consumers who are committed to the firm will expect that relationship to
continue. Once a failure occurs, consumers are likely to expect the firm
to restore the justice between the two parties regardless of how close
they are with service employees.
The managerial implication of this study is also significant. To
increase the customer retention rate and reduce customer switching
behaviors, managers must treat loyal customers who are committed to the
firm differently from disloyal customers, because loyal customers will
have a higher recovery expectation than disloyal customers. If customer
expectations are not accurately gauged and are disregarded, customers
are likely to reduce their commitment level and eventually switch to
competitors.
REFERENCES
Allen, N. J. & P. M. John (1990). The measurement and
antecedents of affective, continuance and normative commitment to the
organization. Journal of Occupational Psychology, 63(1), 1-18.
Allen, N. J. & J. P. Meyer (1990). Organizational socialization
tactics: A longitudinal analysis of links to newcomers' commitment
and role orientation. Academy of Management Journal, 33(4), 847-858.
Aydin, S. & G. Ozer (2006). How switching costs affect
subscriber loyalty in the turkish mobile phone market: An exploratory
study. Journal of Targeting, Measurement & Analysis for Marketing,
14(2), 141-155.
Batson, C. D. (1991). The altruism question Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Batson, C. D. & L. L. Shaw (1991). Evidence for altruism:
Toward a pluralism of prosocial motives. Psychological Inquiry, 2,
107-122.
Bearden, W. O. & J. E. Teel (1983). Selected determinants of
consumer satisfaction and complaint reports. Journal of Marketing
Research, 20(1), 21-28.
Bell, S. J., S. Auh & K. Smalley (2005). Customer relationship
dynamics: Service quality and customer loyalty in the context of varying
levels of customer expertise and switching costs. Journal of the Academy
of Marketing Science, 33(2), 169-183.
Bendapudi, N. & L. L. Berry (1997). Customers' motivations
for maintaining relationships with service providers. Journal of
Retailing, 73, 15-37.
Brown, J. R., R. F. Lusch & C. Y. Nicholson (1995). Power and
relationship commitment: Their impact on marketing. Journal of
Retailing, 71(4), 363-392.
Burnham, T. A., J. K. Frels & V. Mahajan (2003). Consumer
switching costs: A typology, antecedents, and consequences. Journal of
the Academy of Marketing Science, 31(2), 109-126.
Caceres, R. C. & N. G. Paparoidamis (2007). Service quality,
relationship satisfaction, trust, commitment and business-to-business
loyalty. European Journal of Marketing, 41(7/8), 836-867.
Caruana, A. (2004). The impact of switching costs on customer
loyalty: A study among corporate customers of mobile telephony. Journal
of Targeting, Measurement & Analysis for Marketing, 12(3), 256-268.
Chiou, J.-S. & C. Droge (2006). Service quality, trust,
specific asset investment, and expertise: Direct and indirect effects in
a satisfaction-loyalty framework. Journal of the Academy of Marketing
Science, 34(4), 613-627.
Churchill, G. A., Jr. and Carol Surprenant (1982). An investigation
into the determinants of consumer satisfaction. Journal of Marketing
Research, 19(4), 491-504.
Craighead, C. W., K. R. Karwan & J. L. Miller (2004). The
effects of severity of failure and customer loyalty on service recovery
strategies. Production & Operations Management, 13(4), 307-321.
Foa, U. G., K. Y. Tornblorn, E. B. Foa & J. John Converse.
(1973). Introduction: Resource theory in social psychology. In Foa, U.
G., J. John Converse, K. Y. Tornblorn & E. B. foa (Eds.), Resource
theory: Explorations and applications (pp. 1-10). San Diego, CA:
Academic Press Inc.
Fullerton, G. (2003). When does commitment lead to loyalty? Journal
of Service Research, 5(4), 333-344.
Garbarino, E. & M. S. Johnson (1999). The different roles of
satisfaction, trust, and commitment in customer relationships. Journal
of Marketing, 63(2), 70-87.
Gouldner, A. W. (1960). The norm of reciprocity: A preliminary
statement. American Sociological Review, 25(2), 161-178.
Grayson, K. (2007). Friendship versus business in marketing
relationships. Journal of Marketing, 71(4), 121-139.
Gruen, T. W., J. O. Summers & F. Acito (2000). Relationship
marketing activities, commitment, and membership behaviors in
professional associations. Journal of Marketing, 64(3), 34-49.
Guenzi, P. & O. Pelloni (2004). The impact of interpersonal
relationships on customer satisfaction and loyalty to the service
provider. International Journal of Service Industry Management, 15(4),
365-384.
Gundlach, G. T., R. S. Achrol & J. T. Mentzer (1995). The
structure of commitment in exchange. Journal of Marketing, 59(1), 78-92.
Hansen, H., K. Sandvik & F. Selnes (2003). Direct and indirect
effects of commitment to a service employee on the intention to stay.
Journal of Service Research, 5(4), 356-368.
Harrison-Walker, L. J. (2001). The measurement of word-of-mouth
communication and an investigation of service quality and customer
commitment as potential antecedents. Journal of Service Research, 4(1),
60-75.
Hess, R. L., S. Ganesan & N. M. Klein (2003). Service failure
and recovery: The impact of relationship factors on customer
satisfaction. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 31(2),
127-145.
Kelley, H. H. & J. W. Thibaut. (1978). Interpersonal relations:
A theory of interdependence. New York: Wiley.
Kelley, S. W. & M. A. Davis (1994). Antecedents to customer
expectations for service recovery. Journal of the Academy of Marketing
Science, 22(1), 52-61.
Kim, K. & G. L. Frazier (1997). On distributor commitment in
industrial channels of distribution: A multicomponent. Psychology &
Marketing, 14(8), 847-877.
Kumar, N., L. K. Scheer & J.-B. E. M. Steenkamp (1995). The
effects of perceived interdependence on dealer attitudes. Journal of
Marketing Research (JMR), 32(3), 348-356.
Lam, S. Y., V. Shankar, M. K. Erramilli & B. Murthy (2004).
Customer value, satisfaction, loyalty, and switching costs: An
illustration from a business-to-business service context. Journal of the
Academy of Marketing Science, 32(3), 293-311.
Lee, J., J. Lee & L. Feick (2001). The impact of switching
costs on the customer satisfaction-loyalty link: Mobile phone service in
france. Journal of Services Marketing, 15(1), 35-48.
Mattila, A. S. (2001). The effectiveness of service recovery in a
multi-industry setting. Journal of Services Marketing, 15(6/7), 583-596.
Maxham, J. G. I. & R. G. Netemeyer (2002). Modeling customer
perceptions of complaint handling over time: The effects of perceived
justice on satisfaction and intent. Journal of Retailing, 78(4),
239-252.
McCollough, M. A. (1995). The recovery paradox: A conceptual model
and empirical investigation of customer satisfaction and service quality
attitudes after service failure and recovery. Unpublished Dissertation,
The Ohio State University.
McCullough, M. E., E. L. Worthington Jr & K. C. Rachal (1997).
Interpersonal forgiving in close relationships. Journal of Personality
& Social Psychology, 73(2), 321-336.
Miller, J. L., C. W. Craighead & K. R. Karwan (2000). Service
recovery: A framework and empirical investigation. Journal of Operations
Management, 18(4), 387-400.
Morgan, R. M. & S. D. Hunt (1994). The commitment-trust theory
of relationship marketing. Journal of Marketing, 58(July), 20-39.
Neeru, S. & G. P. Paul (2000). Switching costs, alternative
attractiveness and experience as moderators of relationship commitment
in professional, consumer services. International Journal of Service
Industry Management, 11(5), 470-490.
Nunnally, J. C. (1978). Psychometric theory. Toronto: McGraw-Hill
Book Company.
Oliver, R. (1980). A cognitive model of the antecedents and
consequences of satisfaction decisions. Journal of Marketing Research,
17(Novermber), 460-469.
Oliver, R. (1981). Measurement and evaluation of satisfaction
process in retail setting. Journal of Retailing, 57(Fall), 25-48.
Oliver, R. (1993). Cognitive, affective, and attribute bases of the
satisfaction response. Journal of Consumer Research, 20(December),
418-430.
Oliver, R. & W. O. Bearden (1985). Disconfirmation processes
and consumer evaluations in product usage. Journal of Business Research,
14(March), 495-507.
Ostrowski, P. L., T. V. O'Brien & G. L. Gordon (1993).
Service quality and customer loyalty in the commercial airline industry.
Journal of Travel Research, 32, 16-24.
Parasuraman, A., V. A. Zeithaml & L. L. Berry (1988). Servqual:
A multiple-item scale for measuring consumer perceptions of service
quality. Journal of Retailing, 64(1), 5-6.
Pritchard, M. P., M. E. Havitz & D. R. Howard (1999). Analyzing
the commitment-loyalty link in service contexts. Journal of the Academy
of Marketing Science, 27(3), 333-348.
Rusbult, C. E. & J. Verette (1991). An interdependence analysis
of accommodation processes in close relationships. Representative
Research in Social Psychology, 19(1), 3-33.
Ruyter, K. d., W. Martin & B. Josee (1998). On the relationship
between perceived service quality, service loyalty and switching costs.
International Journal of Service Industry Management, 9(5), 436.
Sargeant, A. & S. Lee (2004). Trust and relationship commitment
in the united kingdom voluntary sector: Determinants of donor behavior.
Psychology & Marketing, 21(8), 613-635.
Singh, J. & R. Widing II (1991). What occurs once consumers
complain? A theoretical model for understanding
satisfaction/dissatisfaction outcomes of complaint responses. European
Journal of Marketing, 25(5), 30-46.
Smith, A. K. & R. N. Bolton (1998). An experimental
investigation of customer reactions to service failure and recovery
encounters, paradox or peril? Journal of Service Research, 1(1), 65-81.
Smith, A. K., R. N. Bolton & J. Wagner (1999). A model of
customer satisfaction with service encounters involving failure and
recovery. Journal of Marketing Research, 36(August), 356-372.
Swan, J. E. & F. I. Trawick (1981). Disconfirmation of
expectations and satisfaction with a retail service. Journal of
Retailing, 57(Fall), 49-67.
Terrill, C. & A. Middlebrooks. (2000). Market leadership
strategies for service companies: Creating growth, profits, and customer
loyalty. Lincolnwood, IL: NTC.
Thibaut, J. W. & H. H. Kelley. (1959). The social psychology of
groups. New York: Wiley.
Vargo, S. L. & R. F. Lusch (2004). Evolving to a new dominant
logic for marketing. Journal of Marketing, 68(1), 1-17.
Vargo, S. L. & R. F. Lusch (2008). Service-dominant logic:
Continuing the evolution. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science,
36(1), 1-10.
Verhoef, P. C., P. H. Franses & J. C. Hoekstra (2002). The
effect of relational constructs on customer referrals and number of
services purchased from a multiservice provider: Does age of
relationship matter? Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 30(3),
202-216.
Yang, Z. & R. T. Peterson (2004). Customer perceived value,
satisfaction, and loyalty: The role of switching costs. Psychology &
Marketing, 21(10), 799-822.
Jun Ma, Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne
Table 1: Results from the CFA of Study Constructs
Items Loadings t-Value Reliability
(a) (c)
Affective Commitment (AC) .898
* AC1. I am a loyal customer .662 _ (b)
of this service provider.
* AC2. I feel emotionally .948 20.270
attached to this service
provider.
* AC3. I feel a strong sense .957 20.360
of belonging with this
service provider.
Continuance Commitment (CC) .848
* CC1. It is very hard for me .923 _ (b)
to switch from this service
provider right now even if
I wanted to.
* CC2. My life would be .795 22.463
disrupted if I switched from
this service provider.
* CC3. It would be too costly .689 18.812
to switch from this service
provider right now.
Closeness with Service .977
Employees (CE)
* CE1. The employees of this .959 _ (b)
service provider know me
well.
* CE2. I have developed a good .982 67.752
relationship with employees
of this service provider.
* CE3. There is a friendship .960 58.426
between me and employees of
this service provider.
Service Recovery Expectations .908
(SRE)
* SRE1. If I encounter a service .974 _ (b)
problem, I expect the service
provider to do something in
its power to solve the problem.
* SRE2. If I encounter a service .749 24.265
problem, I do not expect the
service provider to exert much
effort to solve the problem.
* SRE3. If I encounter a .894 33.936
service problem, I expect the
service provider to try to
make up for my loss.
Items Variance
Extracted
(d)
Affective Commitment (AC) .751
* AC1. I am a loyal customer
of this service provider.
* AC2. I feel emotionally
attached to this service
provider.
* AC3. I feel a strong sense
of belonging with this
service provider.
Continuance Commitment (CC) .653
* CC1. It is very hard for me
to switch from this service
provider right now even if
I wanted to.
* CC2. My life would be
disrupted if I switched from
this service provider.
* CC3. It would be too costly
to switch from this service
provider right now.
Closeness with Service .935
Employees (CE)
* CE1. The employees of this
service provider know me
well.
* CE2. I have developed a good
relationship with employees
of this service provider.
* CE3. There is a friendship
between me and employees of
this service provider.
Service Recovery Expectations .770
(SRE)
* SRE1. If I encounter a service
problem, I expect the service
provider to do something in
its power to solve the problem.
* SRE2. If I encounter a service
problem, I do not expect the
service provider to exert much
effort to solve the problem.
* SRE3. If I encounter a
service problem, I expect the
service provider to try to
make up for my loss.
(a) The estimates are standardized coefficients (all p<.05) and
t-values from maximum likelihood solution using EQS.
(b) The corresponding coefficient was fixed to set the metric of
the latent construct.
(c) Estimated composite reliability in line with Fornell and
Larcker (1981).
(d) Estimated variance extracted by the corresponding latent
construct from its hypothesized indicators in line with Fornell
and Larcker (1981).
Table 2: Summary Statistics and Intercorrelations for the Study
Constructs (AVE) (N=617)
Constructs Mean (SD) 1 2
1 Affective Commitment 3.464 1.859 .751
2 Continuance Commitment 2.458 1.639 .548 .653
3 Closeness with Service Employees 2.499 2.014 .699 .462
4 Service Recovery Expectations 5.328 1.648 .286 .202
Constructs 3 4
1 Affective Commitment
2 Continuance Commitment
3 Closeness with Service Employees .935
4 Service Recovery Expectations .214 .770