The Impact of Switching Costs On The Customer Satisfaction-Loyalty Link Mobile Phone Service in France
The Impact of Switching Costs On The Customer Satisfaction-Loyalty Link Mobile Phone Service in France
The Impact of Switching Costs On The Customer Satisfaction-Loyalty Link Mobile Phone Service in France
The impact of switching costs on the customer satisfaction-loyalty link: mobile phone service in France
Jonathan Lee Janghyuk Lee Lawrence Feick
Article information:
To cite this document:
Jonathan Lee Janghyuk Lee Lawrence Feick, (2001),"The impact of switching costs on the customer satisfaction-loyalty link:
mobile phone service in France", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 15 Iss 1 pp. 35 - 48
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/08876040110381463
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Lawrence Feick
Professor of Business Administration, Joseph M. Katz Graduate
School of Business, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA
Market growth As market growth slows or as markets become more competitive, firms are
more likely to attempt to maintain their market share by focusing on
retaining current customers. Customer retention has been advocated as an
easier and more reliable source of superior performance (Fornell and
Wernerfelt, 1987; Peters, 1988; Reichheld and Sasser, 1990). To improve
customer retention, firms initiate a variety of activities, including programs
on customer satisfaction (Anderson and Sullivan, 1993; Rust and Zahorik,
1993; Anderson et al., 1994; Jones and Sasser, 1995), complaint
management (Hirschman, 1970; Fornell and Wernerfelt, 1987), and loyalty
(Reichheld, 1996; Dowling and Uncles, 1997). In understanding customer
satisfaction, researchers have paid particular attention to the management of
service quality: developing strategies to meet customer expectations
(Parasuraman et al., 1988), and explaining the impact of service quality on
profit (Rust et al., 1995; Zeithaml et al., 1996). They have focused on the
process in which customers form expectations of service, perceive service
performance, and then decide to remain with or switch providers. In addition,
researchers have examined the performance implications of investments in
improving service quality and customer retention.
In explaining the link between customer satisfaction and loyalty, only a few
studies in marketing have examined the role of switching costs. Switching
JOURNAL OF SERVICES MARKETING, VOL. 15 NO. 1 2001, pp. 35-48, # MCB UNIVERSITY PRESS, 0887-6045 35
costs are costs that the consumer incurs by changing providers that they
would not incur if they stayed with their current provider. In marketing,
Fornell (1992) was one of the first writers to consider switching costs: adding
them to customer satisfaction in the customer loyalty function. Recently,
Jones and Sasser (1995) mentioned switching costs as one factor that
determines the competitiveness of market environment, since high switching
costs discourage changing from a current provider, thereby yielding less
incentive for firms actively to compete.
Switching costs In the presence of switching costs, ex ante homogeneous products or
services, that is, functionally identical services, become ex post
heterogeneous (Klemperer, 1987). Consequently, observed customer loyalty
may be due to satisfaction or it may be due to dissatisfaction in a product
category in which relatively high switching costs make it difficult for
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Theoretical background
Antecedents and consequences of service quality
Key strategic factor for During the 1980s, service quality received a great deal of attention as a key
product differentiation strategic factor for product differentiation to increase market share and boost
profits (Phillips et al., 1983; Buzzell and Gale, 1987). Thus, researchers
focused on the process in which consumers evaluate service quality.
Consumer expectations and perceived performance of services were found to
be the main antecedents of perceived service quality. Measures of service
quality focused on a variety of dimensions such as tangibles, reliability,
responsiveness, assurance, and empathy (Parasuraman et al., 1985). Also,
researchers found support for the impact of disconfirmation on service
quality, defined as the difference between expected and perceived
performance (Tse and Wilton, 1988; Bolton and Drew, 1991; Cronin and
Taylor, 1992). Later, researchers developed a dynamic model that traced the
way customers form and update their perception of service quality and then
identified the consequences of these perceptions on individual-level
behavioral intention variables (Boulding et al., 1993). Customer retention
has been viewed as one of the various behavioral consequences of service
quality, since it produces a direct and immediate impact on the market share
of firms (Steenkamp, 1989). The analysis of effects of service quality on
profits completed the structure of the service quality process, moving from
expectations to financial consequences (Koska, 1990; Rust et al., 1995;
Zeithaml et al., 1996).
the average net present value of a customer increases by 35 per cent for
software companies and 95 per cent for advertising agencies. In addition, a
consistently high satisfaction level may generate a long-run reputation effect,
thereby insulating firms by reducing customers' price sensitivity (Anderson
and Sullivan, 1993).
High level of satisfaction Although it is assumed that a high level of satisfaction is strongly correlated
with increased customer loyalty, researchers have tried to separately measure
customer loyalty. Customer loyalty sometimes has been operationalized as a
behavior (hard-core loyalty, repeat purchase probability, etc.) and at other
times as an attitude (brand preference, commitment, intention-to-buy). As a
behavior, customer loyalty has been measured as the long-term choice
probability for a brand (Jeuland, 1979; Carpenter and Lehmann, 1985;
Colombo and Morrison, 1989; Dekimpe et al., 1997), or as a minimum
differential needed for switching (Raju et al., 1990). Attitudinal approaches
focused mainly on brand recommendations (Boulding et al., 1993),
resistance to superior products (Narayandas, 1996), repurchase intention
(Cronin and Taylor, 1992; Anderson and Sullivan, 1993), and willingness to
pay a price premium (Zeithaml et al., 1996; Narayandas, 1996). Jones and
Sasser (1995) present a very intuitive classification of an individual's link
between satisfaction and loyalty. Customers were classified into four
different groups: loyalist/apostle (high satisfaction high loyalty), defector/
terrorist (low satisfaction low loyalty), mercenary (high satisfaction low
loyalty), and hostage (low satisfaction high loyalty).
Sample
Face-to-face questions Participants in the study included 256 respondents who responded to face-to-
face questions asked by an interviewer. Interviewers with a survey guideline
randomly contacted current service subscribers of three aforementioned
service providers. Respondents were drawn from the Paris metropolitan area:
the districts of Cergy-Pontoise and La Defense. We sampled private users
only because professional users have different switching costs, that is, it is
the firm, not the individual who chooses the operator and pays the bill.
Participation rate in the survey was about 60 per cent. Sample characteristics
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Note: R2 = 0.345
false loyalty described in Jones and Sasser (1995). While Jones and Sasser
(1995) identify different false loyal groups such as defectors, mercenaries, or
hostages based on the level of satisfaction and loyalty, we believe the
satisfaction-loyalty link can be better characterized by explicitly accounting
for the impact of switching costs.
ANOVA
Model F 21.24* 14.26* 4.89*
R2 0.39 0.36 0.37
Notes
Standard error is shown in parentheses
* Significant at the 5 per cent significance level
** Significant at the 10 per cent significance level
standard groups. For mobile lovers, switching costs do not affect loyalty.
Thus, it seems that, as the number of calling hours exceeds a certain level,
switching becomes difficult and users accept whatever the company has to
offer. Consumers in this group can be thought of either as true loyalists or as
hostages, depending on their satisfaction level. Another interpretation is that
there is a threshold of transaction costs related to the amount of usage that
can deter consumers from switching so that the satisfaction-loyalty
relationship becomes almost flat over the threshold.
Variance in customer Second, the results indicate that the overall satisfaction-loyalty link is
retention significant for all plan types. This result is consistent with the finding of
Bolton (1998) that satisfaction levels explain a substantial portion of
variance in customer retention. We find, however, that consumers react
differently to satisfaction components across plan types. While consumers in
the economy and standard groups consider the quality of core services most
important, mobile-lovers show their strong attachment to value-added
services. A managerial implication is that firms are better off implementing a
feature-based differentiation of service products than using a typical price
discrimination scheme. It was also interesting to find that mobile-lovers are
less sensitive to the pricing aspects of services. In other words, the level of
satisfaction on pricing was much less significant for heavy users than for
regular users. They seem to look for a good range of supporting services and
are willing to pay for them.
the connection between satisfaction and loyalty, firms can take advantage of
the structure of switching costs. By analyzing the changes in consumption
volume and usage patterns they can provide appropriate incentives at the
right time, thus inducing higher switching costs. Hauser et al. (1994) argued
that, if customers can be segmented by switching costs, a firm can improve
its profits by placing different weights on customers with different levels of
satisfaction with different switching costs, and satisfaction receives the
highest weight when the absolute values of the switching costs are small.
Firms providing continuing Though we used an attitudinal measure of switching costs in this study, firms
services providing continuing services such as mobile phone operators, cable and
satellite TV operators, the banking and insurance industry, and consulting
firms can fully utilize their customer database by tracking customers'
consumption behavior to infer behavioral switching costs. Figure 3 illustrates
various types of behavioral switching costs over time. While contractual or
learning costs are fixed and considered only at the time of contract,
transaction costs reflect the firm's long-term relationship with its customers.
Firms need to exercise great caution in managing contractual switching costs
in an attempt to attract customers in a single stroke. Some mobile phone
operators provide very attractive terms in the beginning but consumers end
up with less benefit because of higher cost per unit consumed. Such efforts
have been responded to negatively because they give the impression of
hassling customers through requiring a detailed knowledge of the contract
terms.
Reports of mobile phone customer complaints in many cases are rooted in
operators' efforts to lock-in customers through increasing contractual
switching costs. Since transaction costs can be a good indicator of
Notes
1. Other European countries show a similar trend in market penetration: Germany (23 per
cent); UK (32 per cent); and Spain (29 per cent) as of September 1999. Scandinavian
countries are also on the express rail for mobile communication: Sweden (53 per cent);
Norway (58 per cent); and Finland (62 per cent) (Financial Times, Mobile
Communications, 16 September 1999).
2. Financial Times, ``Mobile communications'', 28 October 1999, p. 12. This amount
includes debt.
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