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      • TESTING THE INFLUENCE OF INERTIA ON POST-RECOVERY BEHAVIOR

        Christian Brock,Markus Blut,Heiner Evanschitzky 글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 2018 Global Marketing Conference Vol.2018 No.07

        During the last decade, customer complaint management received considerable attention in marketing literature, e.g., researchers examined the consequences of a negative incident on customer attitudes towards the provider and the associated behavioral intention such as self-reported repurchase intentions ( e.g. Evanschitzky, Brock, and Blut, 2011; Smith and Bolton, 2002; van Doorn and Verhoef, 2008). However, this stream of research has not examined actual purchase behavior after the complaint (e.g., de Matos, Henrique, and Rossi, 2007). Hence, it is unclear whether service recovery only affects self-reported outcomes (i.e., purchase intention) or actual purchase behavior. Moreover, recent research has indicated that customer inertia explains a large proportion of the variance of a customer’s repurchase behavior (e.g. van Doorn and Verhoef, 2008). So far, no research has assessed the impact of inertia in the service recovery context. It is indicated that the relationship between the provider and the customer is strongly affected by the service failure (van Doorn and Verhoef, 2008), but as of now, the role of past behavior has not been investigated. This study contributes to the complaint management literature by (1) analyzing the effects of service recovery on actual purchase behavior after recovery and (2) by assessing the role of inertia in situations of service recovery. Results indicate that complaint satisfaction has a significant positive impact on post complaining purchase behavior while overall satisfaction has no such effect. Furthermore, past purchase behavior has the strongest impact; thus, inertia plays a substantial role in complaint management.

      • MANAGING CUSTOMER INTEGRATION – THE CRUCIAL ROLE OF FRONTLINE EMPLOYEES

        Julia Rugen,Christian Brock,Markus Blut 글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 2016 Global Marketing Conference Vol.2016 No.7

        Customer integration has received considerable attention in the service literature in order to foster service innovations (e.g. Vargo & Lusch, 2004; Chan, Yim & Lam 2010; Yim, Chan & Lam, 2012; Grönroos & Voima, 2013). The changing role of the customer from being a passive consumer to becoming an active contributor during service provision and co-creator has a significant impact on numerous service firms. Customer integration is essential to many services and successful integration improves service experience of the customer and it allows development of new services in particular (Magnusson, Matthing & Kristensson, 2003; Melton & Hartline, 2010). Against this background, service industries nowadays face the challenge of dealing with new customer and employee roles in times of digitalization, increasing customer activity, changing interaction channels, and development of new business model. While the impact of employee’s customer stewardship on the employee-customer relationship has been investigated in prior studies, is unclear whether an employee’s commitment to the customer also motivates the employee to contribute to service innovation development.We propose that an employee’s level of customer stewardship represents an important requirement for organizational learning about understanding customer needs and to uncover future trends. Based on stewardship and agency theory, we develop a conceptual model proposing that idea generation, articulation, and implementation depend on employee-related factors (e.g., employee stewardship), structural factors (e.g., incentive system), and control-related factors (e.g., monitoring system). Hypotheses are tested using survey data from 390 frontline employees in financial services. Results underline the important roles of employee stewardship and organizational commitment. Insights provide managers guidance how to improve motivation of frontline employees to engage in these important behaviors.

      • FACTORS INFLUENCING THE ACCEPTANCE OF SMART HOME APPLICATIONS

        Marco Hubert,Markus Blut,Christian Brock,Ruby Wenjiao Zhang 글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 2018 Global Marketing Conference Vol.2018 No.07

        Marketing and information systems research has a long history of studying the customer’s acceptance and adoption process of new technologies (Venkatesh et al., 2003). These studies are often motivated by the potential of new technologies such as smart home systems to improve our everyday life. To benefit from these technologies, individuals have to accept them in the first place. To better understand the acceptance process, scholars regularly employ various theories in their studies such as technology acceptance model (Davis, 1989), innovation diffusion theory (Rogers 2003), and perceived risk theory (Featherman and Pavlou, 2003). Although each of these theories provides valuable insights, only recently scholars started combining them in larger framework and examining their interrelationships. These studies argue that each theory has the potential to make a unique contribution to understanding of technology acceptance, but the combination of theories leads to novel insights. The purpose of this study is the development of a comprehensive adoption model combining constructs from various theories and testing these theories against each other to provide new insights. The study develops this model in a smart home applications context which is a complex technological system. The study is based on an online survey consisting of 409 participants; the data is analyzed using structural equation modelling.

      • MOBILE COMMERCE – THE MODERATING ROLES OF PERCEIVED RISK AND APPLICATION CONTEXT

        Marco Hubert,Markus Blut,Christian Brock,Christof Backhaus,Tim Eberhardt 글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 2016 Global Marketing Conference Vol.2016 No.7

        Worldwide, more than 1/3 of all e-commerce transactions in business-to-consumer industries are nowadays executed via mobile devices (Criteo, 2015). Despite its increasing importance, it can be noted that mobile commerce does not seem to “take-off” equally across diverse goods and services contexts. We observe, for instance, that mobile commerce is quite common in service industries for purchasing tickets (e.g., for flights, public transportation, and sport events), while it is less common for services such as financial products. Balasubramanian et al. (2002) addressed this issue and proposed that contexts of m-commerce differ from each other with regard to several characteristics. For example, they propose that location sensitivity (among other characteristics) differs for various m-commerce applications, and that this characteristic may impact acceptance of m-commerce across industries. It may be that acceptance of m-commerce is higher in some industries since use of location sensitive data is appreciated by customers, while it is not valued in other purchasing contexts. Against this background, we propose that examining (1) risk perception related to mobile commerce and (2) different types of mobile commerce applications are essential for gaining a deeper understanding of the phenomenon of differing relevance of m-commerce across industries. In particular, our study acknowledges the differential roles of the financial, performance, and security facets of risk. In addition, we assume that the role of value and risk dimensions differs subject to three mobile commerce application characteristics which are location sensitivity, time criticality, and extent of control. Based on a dataset of 800 respondents, results of our models demonstrate that especially security risk can act as a critical inhibitor of acceptance. The extent to which performance risk and financial risk impact perceived usefulness was found to be moderated by the three contextual characteristics. From a managerial perspective, results show which factors should deliberately be considered in the development of m-commerce applications, and in which different application contexts they matter.

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