PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Customer commitment has many faces, differs globally

2015-07-07
(Press-News.org) HOUSTON - (July 7, 2015) - Companies that want to increase customers' loyalty and get their repeat business would do well to understand the nuanced ways in which and reasons why a customer is committed to that company, according to a recent study by marketing experts at Rice University and Fordham University. The research provides a strategic blueprint for developing customer commitment.

The researchers tested a customer-commitment model that has five dimensions -- affective, normative, economic, forced and habitual. They said previous research has used an "insufficient" three-dimensional commitment model that was lifted from employee-commitment studies and applied to customer-commitment research. They tested their commitment model using both a United States and global sample representing industries such as retail, pharmacy, hotel, Internet, game consoles, banking, automotive and mobile-service providers. In total, the researchers used qualitative and quantitative studies with data from 9,000 consumers and 10 countries. Consumers ranged in age from 18 to 55 and older; men and women were almost equally represented.

"The qualitative phase strongly suggests that people view commitment to a job differently than commitment to a brand," said Vikas Mittal, the J. Hugh Liedtke Professor of Marketing at Rice's Jones Graduate School of Business. He said it is important to develop a model for measuring brand commitment that is contextually appropriate and that companies should strive to optimize each dimension of commitment rather than simply maximize overall commitment. "While some commitment dimensions should be enhanced, other commitment dimensions may need to be reduced, and still other dimensions of commitment may need to be left unaltered," Mittal said.

Mittal co-authored the paper with Lerzan Aksoy, a professor of marketing at Fordham University's Gabelli School of Business; Alexander Buoye, an assistant professor of marketing at the Gabelli School; Carly Frennea, a Ph.D. alumna of the Jones School's marketing program; and Timothy Keiningham, a leading author and speaker on customer loyalty. It will be published in the Journal of Service Research.

The researchers said affective commitment is characterized by a customer's positive emotions toward a goods or service provider. Normative commitment is formed when a customer believes a company shares the customer's beliefs and values. Economic commitment is based on a consumer's perceived investments in a brand, such as when they earn reward points. Forced commitment occurs when consumers perceive an absence of alternatives. Habitual commitment arises partly through learning in settings when consumption behavior is performed repetitively and automatically.

The researchers found that how satisfied customers are with the performance of a company's product or service is the single largest contributor to customer loyalty. Beyond that affective commitment has the largest positive impact on customer loyalty, while forced commitment has the largest negative impact.

Habitual commitment is significantly associated with customer loyalty; with increased usage, customers develop habits and regimes that build commitment. This is a form of inertia among customers that ensures continued patronage, the researchers said.

The optimization of different commitment components may vary for goods versus services, different industries and categories and even customer groups, the researchers said. "To the extent that the antecedents and resources used to optimize each type of commitment are likely to vary, managers will need to have a differentiated and nuanced implementation strategy," Mittal said.

In comparing countries, the researchers found that in the U.S. sample, both affective and habitual commitment were more strongly associated with repurchasing goods than for services. They found that China tended to score highest on each commitment dimension, while France had the lowest affective, normative and economic commitment scores. Habitual commitment appeared to be similar in virtually all countries.

"The cost of cultivating different types of commitment among customers varies from country to country," Mittal said. "Thus, a more locally responsive customer-focus strategy is needed to optimize overall customer commitment."

INFORMATION:

To download a copy of the study, "A Five-Component Customer Commitment Model Implications for Repurchase Intentions in Goods and Services Industries," go to http://ssrn.com/abstract=2593914.

Follow the Jones School via Twitter @RiceMBA.

Follow Rice News and Media Relations via Twitter @RiceUNews.

Related materials:

Mittal bio: http://business.rice.edu/Vikas_Mittal.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study: Temperature a dominant influence on bird diversity loss in Mexico

Study: Temperature a dominant influence on bird diversity loss in Mexico
2015-07-07
LAWRENCE -- A wide-ranging study of gains and losses of populations of bird species across Mexico in the 20th century shows shifts in temperature due to global climate change are the primary environmental influence on the distributions of bird species. "Of all drivers examined ... only temperature change had significant impacts on avifaunal turnover; neither precipitation change nor human impacts on landscapes had significant effects," wrote the authors of the study, which appeared recently in the peer-reviewed journal Science Advances. Using analytical techniques from ...

Marijuana users substitute alcohol at 21

2015-07-07
URBANA, Ill. - A recent study looked at marijuana and alcohol use in people between the ages of 18 and 24. It's probably not surprising that the results show a drastic increase in alcohol consumption in people just over 21; after all, that's the minimum legal age to drink. What University of Illinois economist Ben Crost found remarkable is that, at the same age, there was an equally dramatic drop in marijuana use. "Alcohol appears to be a substitute for marijuana. This sudden decrease in the use of marijuana is because they suddenly have easy access to alcohol," Crost ...

Study identifies brain abnormalities in people with schizophrenia

2015-07-07
ATLANTA--Structural brain abnormalities in patients with schizophrenia, providing insight into how the condition may develop and respond to treatment, have been identified in an internationally collaborative study led by a Georgia State University scientist. Scientists at more than a dozen locations across the United States and Europe analyzed brain MRI scans from 2,028 schizophrenia patients and 2,540 healthy controls, assessed with standardized methods at 15 centers worldwide. The findings, published in Molecular Psychiatry, help further the understanding of the mental ...

Barnett shale research raises new concerns about methane emissions

2015-07-07
Researchers from the University of Houston found that some natural gas wells, compressor stations and processing plants in the Barnett Shale leak far more methane (CH4) than previously estimated, potentially offsetting the climate benefits of natural gas. The study is one of 11 papers published in the July 7 edition of Environmental Science & Technology, all looking at fugitive methane emissions in the Barnett Shale. That region, site of the first widespread shale development in the United States, includes Dallas-Fort Worth and almost two dozen counties to the west ...

Cancer drug 49 times more potent than Cisplatin

2015-07-07
Effectiveness shown in tests on ovarian and bowel cancer Drug can shut down a cancer cell's metabolism Developed by researchers at the University of Warwick's Warwick Cancer Research Centre Tests conducted by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute's Cancer Genome Project New drug could be cheaper to produce and less harmful to healthy cells Tests have shown that a new cancer drug, FY26, is 49 times more potent than the clinically used treatment Cisplatin. Based on a compound of the rare precious metal osmium and developed by researchers at the University of Warwick's ...

Experts call for more understanding of hospital weekend death risk

2015-07-07
Professor Richard Lilford and Dr Yen-Fu Chen of the University's Warwick Medical School, raised the issue following a study that states hospital weekend death risk is common in several developed countries - not just England Professor Lilford, said: "Understanding this is an extremely important task since it is large, at about 10% in relative risk terms and 0.4% in percentage point terms. This amounts to about 160 additional deaths in a hospital with 40,000 discharges per year. "But how much of the observed increase results from service failure? And here is the rub, ...

Down to the quantum dot

Down to the quantum dot
2015-07-07
This news release is available in German. Jülich, 7 July - Using a single molecule as a sensor, scientists in Jülich have successfully imaged electric potential fields with unrivalled precision. The ultrahigh-resolution images provide information on the distribution of charges in the electron shells of single molecules and even atoms. The 3D technique is also contact-free. The first results achieved using "scanning quantum dot microscopy" have been published in the current issue of Physical Review Letters. The related publication was chosen as ...

Smartphones may be detrimental to learning process

2015-07-07
A yearlong study of first-time smartphone users by researchers at Rice University and the U.S. Air Force found that users felt smartphones were actually detrimental to their ability to learn. The research paper "You Can Lead a Horse to Water But You Cannot Make Him Learn: Smartphone Use in Higher Education" appeared in a recent edition of the British Journal of Educational Technology. The research reveals the self-rated impact of smartphones among the users. "Smartphone technology is penetrating world markets and becoming abundant in most college settings," said Philip ...

A key role for CEP63 in brain development and fertility discovered

A key role for CEP63 in brain development and fertility discovered
2015-07-07
Today in Nature Communications, scientists at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) provide molecular details about Seckel Syndrome, a rare disease that causes microcephaly, or small brain, and growth delays. A joint study conducted by Travis Stracker and Jens Lüders indicates that the protein CEP63 plays a key role during brain development as it is involved in the correct division of stem cells in this organ. Furthermore, the researchers have discovered that CEP63 is associated with sperm production--an unknown function until now. Rescuing microcephaly ...

Timber and construction, a well-matched couple

2015-07-07
This news release is available in Spanish. Mikel Zubizarreta, a member of the UPV/EHU's IT 781-13 group, highlights the advantages of timber in building works: "Although it is not as tough as other materials used in structures, it is a better insulator, in other words, it is more energy-efficient and less dense so the structure weighs less. On the other hand, timber is a renewable material -trees are planted and grown and forests are a CO2 sink- and is abundant in the Basque Country (nearly 55% of its surface area consists of forests)." Yet timber is used much less ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

People with rare longevity mutation may also be protected from cardiovascular disease

Mobile device location data is already used by private companies, so why not for studying human-wildlife interactions, scientists ask

Test reveals mice think like babies

From disorder to order: flocking birds and “spinning” particles

Cardiovascular risk associated with social determinants of health at individual and area levels

Experimental NIH malaria monoclonal antibody protective in Malian children

Energy trades could help resolve Nile conflict

Homelessness a major issue for many patients in the emergency department

Undocumented Latinx patients got COVID-19 vaccine at same rate as US citizens

ETRI develops an automated benchmark for labguage-based task planners

Revolutionizing memory technology: multiferroic nanodots for low-power magnetic storage

Researchers propose groundbreaking framework for future network systems

New favorite—smart electric wheel drive tractor: realizes efficient drive with ingenious structure and intelligent control

Using stem cell-derived heart muscle cells to advance heart regenerative therapy

Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation awards Quantitative Biology Fellowships to four cutting-edge scientists

Climb stairs to live longer

Scientists capture X-rays from upward positive lightning

AMS Science Preview: Hawaiian climates; chronic pain; lightning-caused wildfires

Researchers advance detection of gravitational waves to study collisions of neutron stars and black holes

Automated machine learning robot unlocks new potential for genetics research

University of Toronto scientists appointed as GSK chairs will advance drug delivery research and vaccine education tools for healthcare professionals

Air pollution and depression linked with heart disease deaths in middle-aged adults

More efficient molecular motor widens potential applications

Robotic nerve ‘cuffs’ could help treat a range of neurological conditions

Researchers identify targets in the brain to modulate heart rate and treat depressive disorders

Findings of large-scale study on 572 Asian families supports gene-directed management of BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene carriers in Singapore

Many children with symptoms of brain injuries and concussions are missing out on vital checks, national US study finds

Genetic hope in fight against devastating wheat disease

Mutualism, from biology to organic chemistry?

POSTECH Professor Yong-Young Noh resolves two decades of oxide semiconductor challenges, which Is published in prestigious journal Nature

[Press-News.org] Customer commitment has many faces, differs globally