Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1017665 Journal of Business Research 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Prior cultural research generally agrees that Asian consumers (collectivists), who emphasize social harmony, are less likely to complain but more likely to switch and to spread negative word-of-mouth than Western consumers (individualists) in service failures. Drawing from the face concern and embarrassment literature, this paper argues that collectivists are not necessarily less likely to complain than individualists. In fact, the impact of culture on consumer complaining responses will be contingent on the degree of embarrassment involved in the service failure. Results from a cross-cultural experiment indicate that only in a non-embarrassing failure will collectivists less likely complain than individualists. In an embarrassing failure, however, collectivists will more likely complain, as well as switch and spread negative word-of-mouth. These results not only yield interesting insights into cross-cultural consumer behaviors, but also provide rich managerial implications.

► Collectivists (vs. individualists) are not necessarily less likely to complain. ► In embarrassing failure, collectivists (vs. individualists) will more likely complain, switch and spread negative word-of-mouth. ► Face concern is the key explanatory variable for these cultural differences.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Business and International Management
Authors
,