2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11747-015-0453-6
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Customer win-back: the role of attributions and perceptions in customers’ willingness to return

Abstract: Interest in customer reacquisition has increased as firms embrace the concept of customer relationship management. Using survey and transactional data from defected subscribers of a publishing company, we investigate how defected customers evaluate their propensity to return to the company prior to any win-back offer. We introduce a new variable for relationship marketing, general willingness to return (GWR), and show that it is strongly and positively related to the actual return decision and the duration of … Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(47 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
(86 reference statements)
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“…Following Pick et al [55] and Hess, Ganesan, and Klein [37], we conceptualize RS as the total number of orders during a customer's lifetime before the complaint. For this variable we went beyond the time frame of 16 months between September 2015 and December 2016 and included all orders a customer had ever placed with the retailer.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Following Pick et al [55] and Hess, Ganesan, and Klein [37], we conceptualize RS as the total number of orders during a customer's lifetime before the complaint. For this variable we went beyond the time frame of 16 months between September 2015 and December 2016 and included all orders a customer had ever placed with the retailer.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most studies use relationship quality (RQ) [16,72] or relationship strength (RS) [11,29] as constructs to evaluate a customer's relation with the firm. In studies working with secondary data, researchers often assess the strength of a relationship based on the customer's transactional history with a firm and the expected future [6,11,37,55].…”
Section: Consumer Relationships and Consumer Responses To Service Faimentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Next, participants indicated their attitudes toward the focal brand (Becker-Olsen 2003; α = .98) and-if applicable-to the third party (α = .99). We also measured participants' responsibility attributions of the described touchpoint to the focal brand (controllability and locus of control dimensions: Hess et al 2003;Pick et al 2016;Tsiros et al 2004; α = .88). Further, to measure associations of the focal brand with the described touchpoint, we asked participants to indicate to what extent they associate the focal brand with attributes that describe the touchpoint in question (based on the stimuli we deducted the following potential associations: satisfying: successful, caring for customers, great service; dissatisfying: unsuccessful, inconvenient, poor quality).…”
Section: Procedures and Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Under the transaction model, we demonstrate the link between the factors of general willingness to return and actual return behaviour of dormant customers. Pick, Thomas, Tillmanns, and Krafft (2016) Different customers react differently depending upon the experience in client switching, delay in contacting defected account, quality of services provided by competitor etc. The model depicted below not only highlights the importance of customer win-back exercise as it helps a company evaluate its current product and service offering against its competitors and helps in understanding the current or new trends in the market.…”
Section: What Drives the Return Of Dormant Account?mentioning
confidence: 99%