Managers know that customers’ overall service quality perception and positive behavioral intentions toward the service provider are influenced strongly by effective complaint management. In this paper, we provide and test an explanation for how complaint management influences overall service quality perception and behavioral intentions. The implications of our model provide more focused guidance on complaint behavior management. It is suggested, based on our research, that service delivery and communications be used to emphasize a firm’s strengths. Thus complaint management should also result in reinforcing the strengths of the firm and not just in covering up or fixing its problems. Finally, we wish to emphasize that customer expectations themselves change within the encounter itself and play a key role in the perception of service quality. Thus, the focus during service delivery should also concentrate on reinforcing customer expectations on the strengths of the service provider.
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1 April 2000
Research Article|
April 01 2000
After‐service response in service quality assessment: a real‐time updating model approach Available to Purchase
Ben Shaw‐Ching Liu;
Ben Shaw‐Ching Liu
Assistant Professor of Marketing, Department of Business Administration, University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign, USA
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D. Sudharshan;
D. Sudharshan
Professor of Business Administration and Associate Dean for Planning, College of Commerce and Business Administration, University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign, USA
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Lawrence O. Hamer
Lawrence O. Hamer
Assistant Professor of Marketing, De Paul University, Chicago, Illinois, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2054-1651
Print ISSN: 0887-6045
© MCB UP Limited
2000
Journal of Services Marketing (2000) 14 (2): 160–177.
Citation
Shaw‐Ching Liu B, Sudharshan D, Hamer LO (2000), "After‐service response in service quality assessment: a real‐time updating model approach". Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 14 No. 2 pp. 160–177, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/08876040010321000
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