Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction ConsumerSatisfaction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Service Quality Chapter 8.
Advertisements

Chapter 7 Consumers’ Evaluation of Service Chapter 7 slides for Marketing for Pharmacists, 2nd Edition.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2003. The McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights Reserved Chapter 4 Customer Perceptions of Service Customer Perceptions Customer Satisfaction.
5 Chapter Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for.
5-1 Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for Customer.
McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies 1 S M S M McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies Chapter 4 CUSTOMER PERCEPTIONS OF SERVICE.
Donna J. Hill, PhD Professor of Marketing Foster College of Business Administration Bradley University.
Chapter 12 Services and Non-profit Marketing. © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin Services Defined A service.
Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Service Quality. Quality ‘There is no limit to the quality that can be produced, even in the most menial job’ Dave Thomas quoted in D Bone and R Griggs,
Consumer Satisfaction 18 Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Defining and Measuring Service Quality
Chapter 4 Customer Perceptions of Service Donna J. Hill Associate Professor of Marketing Bradley University Fall 2000.
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers
Focusing on Customers.
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
Chapter Understanding Customer Expectations and Perceptions Through Marketing Research Donna J. Hill, Ph.D. Fall 2000.
THE MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL OF QUALITY, 5e, © 2002 South-Western/Thomson Learning TM 1 Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
5 Creating Long-Term Loyalty Relationships
Customer Value, Satisfaction and Loyalty. The New “Managerial Paradigm”
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Exploring the association between customers’ perception of service quality and sale performance level of employees in service sector *MİRAY’s RESEARCH.
Models of service quality
Consumer Behaviour in Services
Slide 5.1 Chapter 5 Focusing on Customers. Session Overview n Importance of Customer Satisfaction n Creating Satisfied Customers n Practices of Successful.
Marketing Service Organisations BM404 – 2006 Lecture 2.
 Types of Customer Value  Customer Perceived Value  Satisfaction  Loyalty  Customer Satisfaction and Marketing Performance.
Customer Perceptions of Service
Customer Value, Satisfaction and Loyalty. The New “Managerial Paradigm”
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
Customer Perceptions of Quality and Customer Satisfaction
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT SEMESTER /2013 AMW342 SERVICES MARKETING.
Creating Customer Value, Satisfaction, and Loyalty
5-1 Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for Customer.
5-1 Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for Customer.
UNDERSTANDING CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS
McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies 1 S M S M McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies Part 2 LISTENING TO CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS.
© 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2003. The McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights Reserved Chapter 4 Customer Perceptions of Service Customer Perceptions Service Quality.
Understanding customer expectations and perceptions
Customer Perceptions of Service
CEDISC Thipsuda KITJAPIPAT Thailand, DBA Intake 4 9 April 2009 How well can SERVQUAL explain customer satisfaction, complaint behavior and commitment in.
© 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
P a g e | 1 Customer Satisfaction and Retention Strategies Dr. Ajay K. Sirsi
5 Creating Long-Term Loyalty Relationships 1. Figure 5.1 Customer-Orientations Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 5-2.
Customer perception Perception means to take information about the enviournment.is called perception. (For example when a customer purchase the product.
Quality Systems PG Diploma in Hospitality Management
5-1 The Customer Gap. 5-2 The Customer Gap What a customer believes should or will happen Subjective assessments of actual service experiences (reality.
BRANCH PERFORMANCE.
ENTREPRENEURSHIP Lecture No: 28 Resource Person: Malik Jawad Saboor Assistant Professor Department of Management Sciences COMSATS Institute of Information.
5-1 Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for Customer.
SERVICE MANAGEMENT MGM 4204 Dr Mass Hareeza Ali Department of Marketing & Management Faculty of Economics & Management Universiti Putra Malaysia
Service Quality Orientation of Management Employee Satisfaction Employee Retention Customer Satisfaction Delivery of Service Quality Customer Retention.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Part one: Service Quality in the eyes of the customer
THE MANAGEMENT & CONTROL OF QUALITY, 7e, © 2008 Thomson Higher Education Publishing 1 Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers The Management & Control of Quality,
The Servqual Model SERVICE QUALITY.
Course Name: Principles of Marketing Code: MRK 152 Chapter: Six Services Building Customer Value.
Hospitality Services. Definition of Service A service is an activity or series of activities of more or less intangible nature that normally, but not.
McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies 1 S M S M McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies Chapter 4 CUSTOMER PERCEPTIONS OF SERVICE.
STRATEGIC LOGISTICS MANAGEMENT AYSU GÖÇER LOG 404.
Chapter 13 DEFINING AND MEASURING SERVICE QUALITY
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
What is Service Quality
Chapter 03: Creating Long-term Loyalty Relationships
Afjal Hossain Assistant Professor Department of Marketing
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
Marketing Analytics Review Session
Presentation transcript:

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction ConsumerSatisfaction

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Outline The concept of consumer satisfaction/ dissatisfaction Theoretical frameworks: –Expectancy-disconfirmation theory –Attribution theory Measurement and management of consumer satisfaction Consequences of satisfaction/dissatisfaction

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Consumer satisfaction/dissatisfaction satisfaction refers to a consumer’s judgment that a product (or its features) provided a pleasurable level of consumption-related fulfillment (Oliver 1997); distinguish: –transactions-specific satisfaction –cumulative satisfaction

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Expectancy-disconfirmation theory According to ED-theory, satisfaction is a function of three variables:  expectations regarding product performance formed prior to purchase  perceptions of product performance resulting from experience with the product  comparison of perceived performance with prior expectations, leading to positive or negative disconfirmation or confirmation;

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Attribution theory success and failure experiences with products lead to positive or negative overall emotional reactions, but may also elicit causal inferences along three dimensions: locus stability controllability (dis) satisfaction appears to be primarily related to locus of causality; in addition, particular attributions seem to be linked to specific emotions (e.g., failures controllable by the marketer lead to anger) and may influence the type of redress sought (e.g., consumers prefer a refund to an exchange in the case of stable attributions for product failure);

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction How satisfied are customers with the company's product? What are the company's strengths and weaknesses? What recommendations would you make to the management of this company? What other data would you collect to assess how well the company satisfies its customers? In-class exercise: Satisfaction measurement

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Measurement and management of customer satisfaction qualitative methods: –ghost shopping –complaint and suggestion systems –critical incident method (Bitner et al.) quantitative methods –direct ratings of overall satisfaction –derived measures of satisfaction importance-performance measures disconfirmation measures (GAPS, ACSI)

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Critical incident technique (Bitner et al.) critical incidents are specific interactions between customers and service firm employees that are especially satisfying or especially dissatisfying; incident classification: –employee response to service delivery failure (e.g., unavailable or slow service); –employee response to customer needs and requests (e.g., ‘special’ needs, customer preferences, customer errors); –unprompted and unsolicited employee actions (e.g., level of attention, unusual employee behavior);

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction In-class exercise: ACSI Read the description of the ACSI model and be prepared to discuss the constructs included in the model. Think about the 9 paths (arrows) in the model and try to figure out the sign of the relationships. Once you are familiar with the model, study the National Quarterly Scores (use the link on the home page). Pick an industry that you’re interested in and study the historical performance of the major players in this industry. What are the implications of these scores for the future performance of these companies?

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction market-based performance measure for firms, industries, economic sectors, and national economies; assessment of overall customer satisfaction as well as its antecedents and consequences; can be used for benchmarking over time and cross-sectionally; American Customer Satisfaction Index (Fornell et al.) perceived quality customer expectations perceived value customer satisfaction customer complaints customer loyalty

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction The GAPS model WOM Personal Needs Past Experience External Communication to Consumers Expected Service Perceived Service Service Delivery Translation of Mgmt. Perceptions into SQ specs Management Perceptions of Consumer Expectations GAP 3 GAP 2 GAP 5 GAP 1 GAP 4 CONSUMERCONSUMER MARKETERMARKETER

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Dimensions of perceived service quality (Parasuraman, Zeithaml, and Berry) reliability: ability to perform the promised service dependably, accurately, and on time; assurance: knowledge and courtesy of employees and their ability to inspire trust and confidence; tangibles: appearance of physical facilities, equipment, and contact personnel; empathy: caring, individualized attention the firm provides its customers; responsiveness: willingness to help customers and provide the requested service promptly;

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Consequences of dissatisfaction responses to dissatisfaction: –do nothing; –avoid seller/brand in the future (“exit”); –negative word of mouth to friends; –complain to seller or a third party (“voice”); action taken depends on such factors as the level of dissatisfaction, the importance of the product, the costs and benefits of actions, attribution of blame, and personal characteristics;

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Loyalty a deeply held commitment to rebuy or repatronize a preferred product or service in the future, despite situational influences and marketing efforts having the potential to cause switching behavior (Oliver); often measured by share of purchases, intent to repurchase, RFM, retention and longevity, positive WOM, etc.;

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Satisfaction and loyalty (Heskett et al.) extremely dissatisfied somewhat dissatisfied slightly dissatisfied satisfiedvery satisfied terrorist apostle zone of affection zone of indifference zone of defection satisfaction Loyalty (retention)

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction Extending the duration of customer relationships the notion of exchange has shifted from a transaction paradigm to a relationship paradigm; however, the economics of defections are often not well understood (e.g., can a reduction of defections by 5 % really boost profits by 25% to 85% ?); customers become more profitable over time because operating costs decline, purchases tend to increase, price premiums can be charged, and loyal customers provide free WOM;

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction How much profit a credit card customer generates over time (Reichheld and Sasser)

Consumer Behavior Consumer Satisfaction A credit card company’s defection curve (Reichheld and Sasser) Note: Customer value refers to the net present value of the profit streams a customer generates over the average customer life.