Thinking about the service encounter enhances encounter-related word-of-mouth

Jan Mattsson, Magnus Söderlund

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearchpeer-review

Abstract

This study examines the impact of thinking about a service encounter, after it has been completed, on telling others about it (i.e., word-of-mouth). The main finding was that encounter-related thinking boosted word-of-mouth. We also found that the think-talk association was mediated by (a) the memorability of the service encounter and (b) the extent to which what had happened had been subject to rehearsal with the purpose of telling others about it. These findings should be seen in relation to the literature’s view that customer satisfaction, not thinking, is a dominant predictor of word-of-mouth. Our results, however, indicate that satisfaction’s contribution to the variation in talking about the encounter was modest (and customer satisfaction played only a minor role in explaining why an encounter is thought about).

Original languageEnglish
Publication date2017
Publication statusPublished - 2017
EventQuality in Services - Porto, Portugal
Duration: 12 Jun 201715 Jun 2017
Conference number: 15
https://web.fe.up.pt/~quis15/program-2/program/

Symposium

SymposiumQuality in Services
Number15
Country/TerritoryPortugal
CityPorto
Period12/06/201715/06/2017
Internet address

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