Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
886265 Journal of Retailing 2014 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

•This study develops a four-stage model from perceived quality to customer loyalty.•In addition to customer satisfaction, product beliefs mediate this chain of effects.•Cross-over effects connect rational and emotional processes within this chain.•The amount and type of consumer experience moderate these effects.•The results hold across four retailing contexts.

To support managerial practice and help improve analytical models in retailing, this article extends the literature on processes in the psychological chain of effects from perceived quality to customer loyalty by making three original and fundamental contributions. Based on multilevel structural equation modeling of consumer data from Bolivia, Japan, and the USA, it shows that product beliefs mediate this chain of effects and that cross-over effects connect rational and emotional processes within this chain. Moreover, it elucidates conditions moderating the strength of these emotional and rational processes. Breadth of experience positively moderates the mediating role of product beliefs. Relative price positively moderates the effect of hedonic product beliefs on affective customer satisfaction and negatively moderates the effect of utilitarian product beliefs on cognitive customer satisfaction. Time since purchase positively moderates the role of emotional processes and negatively moderates the role of rational processes. The moderating effects of sensory, affective, and intellectual brand experience support the predictive validity of the research model. Further analyses illuminate how social recognition, customer value co-creation through product usage patterns, and product-service bundling affect product beliefs, as well as how affective and cognitive customer satisfaction influence positive word-of-mouth.

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Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Marketing
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