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Emotional antecedents and outcomes of service recovery

Riscinto Kozub, K., Anthony O’Neill, M. and Palmer, A. A. (2014) Emotional antecedents and outcomes of service recovery. Journal of Services Marketing, 28 (3). pp. 233-243. ISSN 0887-6045

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To link to this item DOI: 10.1108/JSM-08-2012-0147

Abstract/Summary

Purpose – The purpose of this study was to investigate the service recovery experience in the luxury hotel industry by introducing emotions as a predictor of future behavioural intention and to compare traditional cognitive measures of satisfaction following a recovery process with measures based on affect. Design/methodology/approach – A mixed-methods approach was adopted comprising a main quantitative study, preceded by an exploratory qualitative study. Findings – The study provides further support for the use of emotions in understanding consumer behaviour following a service failure. Research limitations/implications – As an abstract concept, we have only limited physical, measurable manifestation of emotions, and the construct is difficult to operationalise in social sciences research. Furthermore, this research has required retrospective self-reporting of emotions. Practical implications – The use of emotions can provide a better diagnostic tool for understanding attitudes that customers go away with following a service failure, rather than concentrating on cognitive measures of performance. Originality/value – The study has provided further support for the use of emotions in understanding consumer behaviour following a service failure.

Item Type:Article
Refereed:Yes
Divisions:Henley Business School > Marketing and Reputation
ID Code:77500
Publisher:Emerald

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