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Abstract
Purpose - To examine the relative roles played by cognition and emotion in the development of customer satisfaction in a retail setting.
Design/methodology/approach - An experimental design was employed. Study participants were exposed one of two expectation scenarios depicting past experience with an unnamed retail store, with one developed to build high expectations and one developed to create low expectations. Study participants were then exposed to one of two performance scenarios depicting a new experience with the unnamed retail store, with one depicting a successful pleasurable experience and one depicting a performance failure. Participants were also asked to complete scales measuring their cognitive evaluation of the perceived performance and their emotional reaction to the perceived performance.
Findings - Both cognitive evaluation and emotional reaction were found to explain the level of satisfaction experienced in a retail setting. As opposed to a service setting, however, cognitive evaluation was found to be more important than emotional reaction in explaining customer satisfaction. When the individual treatment levels were examined, anger/delight and shame were observed to be significant only for the third treatment level (high expectations/poor performance).
Practical implications - The findings suggest that retailers whose customers possess high expectations will need to place explicit attention on their customers' emotions. If a performance is deemed as negative, not only will the negative performance affect level of satisfaction, but also the negative emotions associated with the poor performance will also likely affect level of satisfaction.
Originality/value - The paper examines the role of emotion in developing customer satisfaction in a retail setting.
Keywords Customer satisfaction, Cognition, Retailing
Paper type Research paper
The importance of customer satisfaction to the success of consumer goods manufacturers (Mittal and Kamakura, 2001; Voss et al., 1998) and to the success of retailers (Darian et al, 2001) has been well documented. Customer satisfaction is regarded as a primary determining factor of repeat shopping and purchasing behavior. The greater the degree to which a consumer experiences satisfaction with a retailer, for instance, the greater the probability the consumer will revisit the retailer (Wong and Sohal, 2003).
Research into the role of customer satisfaction has generally focused on expectations, perceived performance, and satisfaction as modeled within a confirmation/disconfirmation paradigm (Krampf et al, 2003). When faced with...