6533b85cfe1ef96bd12bd468
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Customer perceived value, satisfaction, and loyalty: the role of willingness to share information
Karjaluoto HeikkiMatti LeppäniemiHannu Saarijärvisubject
Value (ethics)Economics and Econometricsasiakastyytyväisyysmedia_common.quotation_subjectwillingness to share informationContext (language use)02 engineering and technologyShare of walletLoyalty business model020204 information systems0502 economics and businessLoyalty0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringasiakaskokemusBusiness and International ManagementMarketingta512perceived valuemedia_commonMarketingcustomer loyalty05 social sciencessatisfactionOutcome measuresasiakasuskollisuusshare of walletComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETY050211 marketingCustomer satisfactionBusinessarvottaminendescription
This study proposes and tests an integrative model to examine the relationships among customers’ willingness to share information, satisfaction, perceived value, and loyalty in a retailing context. This study extends research on customers’ willingness to share information from trust and privacy concerns toward key outcome measures such as perceived value, customer satisfaction, and loyalty, and is thus among the first to model customers’ willingness to share information with companies in robust theoretical retailing frameworks. The proposed relationships were tested using data from two retailing contexts – groceries (N = 429) and do-it-yourself (DIY) (N = 895). Findings from the two samples suggest that both perceived value and satisfaction are significant determinants of customers’ willingness to share information with a company. Although some differences emerge in the two studies, structural modeling largely supports the hypothesized framework and positions customers’ willingness to share information as an important antecedent of their loyalty intentions and behavior. This study provides practitioners with preliminary insight into the relationship between willingness to share information and perceived value, customer satisfaction, and customer loyalty. This study advances retailing research, as it is one of the few empirical studies investigating the role of customers’ willingness to share information in driving loyalty and its relationship with perceived value and satisfaction in a retailing context. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2016-11-01 | The International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research |