Alternative Measures of Satisfaction and Word of Mouth
Journal of Services Marketing, Forthcoming
39 Pages Posted: 27 Sep 2016 Last revised: 6 Jun 2017
Date Written: September 26, 2016
Abstract
Scholars have conceptualized and measured customer satisfaction in several different ways such as overall satisfaction and relative satisfaction. This paper studies if how one conceptualizes customer satisfaction matters. Authors study if key attributes of customer satisfaction differ in their impact based on how satisfaction is conceptualized. Furthermore, they examine the effects of these alternative measures of satisfaction on word of mouth (WOM). Authors conduct three survey studies: at a single independently-owned restaurant (n=248); across restaurants using a national sample of respondents (n=208); and across apparel retailers using a local sample of respondents (n=214). Authors analyzed data using iterative seemingly unrelated regression (SUR) and recursive system of equations with correlated errors. Results show that the core offering (food quality or merchandise quality) and service influence overall satisfaction about equally; however, influence of the core offering on relative satisfaction is more than that of service. Furthermore, while overall satisfaction influences WOM relative satisfaction does not. Thus, focusing solely on the core offering to improve relative satisfaction may not be enough. Positive WOM is generated when customers are overall satisfied with the brand which demands both a superior core offering as well as high service. Firms should aim for overall best performance rather than merely better relative performance.
Keywords: Customer Satisfaction, Word of Mouth (WOM), Seemingly Unrelated Regression (SUR), Recursive System of Equations with Correlated Errors
JEL Classification: M31, M37
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation