Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
351307 Computers in Human Behavior 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Recovery of online service is an issue in need of study. The current study empirically examines (1) the relationships among perceived justice, satisfaction with recovery of online service and repurchase intention of online service/failure encounters; and (2) the moderating effects of transaction frequency on these relationships. The current study collects 187 self-administered questionnaires to gather customers’ perceptions of actual online service/failure encounters. Research findings demonstrate that distributive justice, interactional justice and procedural justice can positively lead to satisfaction with recovery of online service and repurchase intention toward online service. These results further show that customers with low transaction frequency tend to focus more on interactional justice to establish their satisfaction with recovery of online service. On the other hand, customers with high transaction frequency focus more on procedural justice.

► We model perceived justices and responses of online service failure encounters. ► We test the moderating effects of transaction frequency. ► Perceived justices positively form responses of online service failure encounters. ► Transaction frequency has moderating effects on perceived justices and responses.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
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