Focuses on the service performance gap, which occurs when service is not performed according to the standards set. It attempts to define the antecedents of the gap. The research is set in the European airline industry with a theoretical framework based on service quality and the trust‐commitment theory of relationship marketing. With support from a literature review on exchange theory, equity theory, role theory and the trust‐commitment theory of relationship marketing, 18 hypotheses are advanced to develop and test an alternative to the original model by Parasuraman et al. Data were collected from two European airlines. A postal survey of 600 customer contact employees produced 193 respondents, an overall response rate of 32 per cent. The empirical investigation involved the use of structural equation modelling to estimate the proposed model. Exploratory factor analysis was used to assess the measurement instrument. The study offers some support to the work of Parasuraman et al., in another industrial context. It extends their findings by proposing an alternative model, which shows that the service performance gap is influenced both directly and indirectly by a significant number of critical factors including trust, commitment and co‐operation.
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1 April 2000
Conceptual Paper|
April 01 2000
The service performance gap: testing the redeveloped causal model Available to Purchase
Pierre Chenet;
Pierre Chenet
University College Cork, Ireland
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Caroline Tynan;
Caroline Tynan
Nottingham Business School, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK, and
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Arthur Money
Arthur Money
Henley Management College, Henley‐on‐Thames, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7123
Print ISSN: 0309-0566
© MCB UP Limited
2000
European Journal of Marketing (2000) 34 (3-4): 472–497.
Citation
Chenet P, Tynan C, Money A (2000), "The service performance gap: testing the redeveloped causal model". European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 34 No. 3-4 pp. 472–497, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/03090560010311993
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