Online Customer Loyalty Forecasting the Repatronage Behavior of Online Retail Customers için kapak resmi
Online Customer Loyalty Forecasting the Repatronage Behavior of Online Retail Customers
Başlık:
Online Customer Loyalty Forecasting the Repatronage Behavior of Online Retail Customers
ISBN:
9783322815811
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 2003.
Yayın Bilgileri:
Wiesbaden : Deutscher Universitätsverlag : Imprint: Deutscher Universitätsverlag, 2003.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
XXII, 361 p. 1 illus. online resource.
Series:
Kundenmanagement & Electronic Commerce,
Contents:
1 Introduction -- 1.1 Problem description -- 1.2 Research Aim -- 1.3 Structure of the Thesis -- 2 Conceptual Foundations -- 2.1 Service Encounters -- 2.2 Self-service Technology Research -- 2.3 The Internet as a Self-service Technology -- 3 Concept and Importance of Repatronage Decisions -- 4 Conceptual Development of a Repatronage Decision Framework -- 4.1 Relational Market Behavior: Analysis of the Customer Perspective -- 4.2 Relevant Theoretical Concepts -- 4.3 Repatronage Decision Modelling: Analysis of Antecedents -- 4.4 Summary of Hypotheses -- 5 Repatronage Decisions as an Empirical Problem -- 5.1 The Study Design -- 5.2 Operationalization and Measurement of Constructs -- 5.3 Model Estimation and Results -- 5.4 Discussion of Empirical Findings -- 6 Conclusion -- 6.1 Summary of Findings -- 6.2 Managerial Implications -- 6.3 Limitations and Future Research Directions -- A Internet Statistics -- B Questionnaire -- C Comparison Between Groups -- References.
Abstract:
Technology is changing the way customers and companies interact. How consumer purchasing behavior is affected by the use of technologies which enable them to purchase independently of direct service employee contact - i.e., by shopping via a technological interface rather than in a brick-and-mortar shop - is of great interest to corporations. Roberta C. Nacif investigates the behavioral consequences of self-service purchases when consumers shop via the Internet. She explores the effects that customers' assessments of service encounters experiences (attitudes) and transactional history (prior behavior) have on their subsequent purchase behavior. She analyzes two aspects of repurchase behavior: customers' decision of whether or not to repurchase from the same retailer and customers' decision about how much money to spend. The author develops a framework describing the motivations of customers to engage in relational market behavior and tests this framework with individualized customer data obtained from a major European online retailer.
Subject Term:
Dil:
English