Proposes a model to explain consumers’ willingness to recommend a service provider. The model considers four predictors of this phenomenon: affect, outcome, competency and courtesy. In a laboratory setting, subjects read and responded to a scenario describing a service encounter of a fictitious individual with a dry cleaner and/or an attorney. The subjects were later asked how likely they were to recommend this service provider to a friend experiencing a similar problem. Separate path analyses were performed to analyze each type of service encounter; and in both scenarios, outcome, competency, courtesy, joy and disgust were found to influence the likelihood that the consumer would recommend a particular service provider. The proposed model accounts for more than 72 percent of the variation in the subjects’ decision to recommend.
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1 October 1998
Research Article|
October 01 1998
The impact of outcome, competency and affect on service referral Available to Purchase
Madeline Johnson;
Madeline Johnson
Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Houston‐Downtown, Houston, Texas, USA
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George M. Zinkhan;
George M. Zinkhan
Professor, Department of Marketing and Distribution, The University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
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Gail S. Ayala
Gail S. Ayala
Assistant Professor, Department of Marketing and Distribution, The University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2054-1651
Print ISSN: 0887-6045
© MCB UP Limited
1998
Journal of Services Marketing (1998) 12 (5): 397–415.
Citation
Johnson M, Zinkhan GM, Ayala GS (1998), "The impact of outcome, competency and affect on service referral". Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 12 No. 5 pp. 397–415, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/08876049810235432
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