When service failure is not service failure: an exploration of the forms and motives of “illegitimate” customer complaining

Purpose – Proposes responding to earlier calls for further research into “fraudulent” or “feigned” customer complaints, and providing insights which explore and describe the motivations and forms of such deliberate “illegitimate” customer complaints. Design/methodology/approach – Critical incident technique was utilized in analyzing 104 interviews with customers who had knowingly made an illegitimate complaint within the six months prior to the interview. Data collection stopped at the point of theoretical saturation and was subsequently analyzed according to the coding procedures advocated by Strauss and Corbin (open, axial and selective coding). Findings – Two key insights emerged from data analysis. First, coding procedures revealed four distinct forms of customer complainants. These are labeled; “one-off complainants”, “opportunistic complainants”, “conditioned complainants”, and “professional complainants”. Second, six main motives for articulating fraudulent complaints were uncovered during data analysis. These are termed; “freeloaders”, “fraudulent returners”, “fault transferors”, “solitary ego gains”, “peer-induced esteem seekers”, and “disruptive gains”. Research limitations/implications – The study is constrained by its exploratory design and qualitative methods employed. Subsequently, future studies could employ survey methods to improve empirical generalizability. Future studies could adopt a more inclusive approach and incorporate insights from employees, managers, and other relevant actors within service encounters. Practical implications – Practical implications highlighted by the study include a need for businesses to examine and, in many cases, reevaluate their personnel training, customer complaint and service recovery procedures. Furthermore, managers may wish to enforce mechanisms wherein customer complaints are monitored and tracked in a manner that assists in the identification and challenging of re-offending fraudulent complainers. Originality/value – The study constitutes the first systematic attempt to explore and describe illegitimate customer complaining behaviors.

[1]  Reuben M. Baron,et al.  An equity-based model of vandalism , 1982 .

[2]  R. Clarke Situational Crime Prevention , 1995, Crime and Justice.

[3]  Girish N. Punj,et al.  Choosing to Misbehave: a Structural Model of Aberrant Consumer Behavior , 1993 .

[4]  Kaisa Snellman,et al.  Customer complaining behaviour in technology‐based service encounters , 2003 .

[5]  Subin Im,et al.  The effect of attitude and perception on consumer complaint intentions , 2003 .

[6]  James J. Sobol,et al.  drinking patterns, social interaction, and barroom behavior: a routine activities approach , 2000 .

[7]  Tom DeWitt,et al.  Rethinking Service Recovery Strategies , 2003 .

[8]  Bernd Stauß,et al.  Process‐oriented measurement of service quality: Applying the sequential incident technique , 1997 .

[9]  Ronald J. Faber,et al.  Compulsive Buying: A Phenomenological Exploration , 1989 .

[10]  Emmanuel Okechukwu Ogbonna,et al.  Exploring Service Sabotage , 2002 .

[11]  W. Bearden,et al.  Selected Determinants of Consumer Satisfaction and Complaint Reports , 1983 .

[12]  Kim S. Harris,et al.  Consumer-to-Consumer Conversations in Service Settings , 2004 .

[13]  Sarah Farrugia A dangerous occupation? Violence in public libraries , 2002 .

[14]  Jeffrey Blodgett,et al.  A Bayesian Network Model of the Consumer Complaint Process , 2000 .

[15]  Anthony D. Cox,et al.  Research note: Social influences on adolescent shoplifting—Theory, evidence, and implications for the retail industry , 1993 .

[16]  L. Kohlberg Stage and sequence: The cognitive-developmental approach to socialization , 1969 .

[17]  Per Skålén,et al.  The effect of service guarantees on service recovery , 2003 .

[18]  Ralph L. Day,et al.  Consumer Response to Dissatisfaction With Services and Intangibles , 1978 .

[19]  R. Warland,et al.  Dissatisfied Consumers: Who Gets Upset and Who Takes Action , 1975 .

[20]  Ricky W. Griffin,et al.  ORGANIZATION-MOTIVATED AGGRESSION: A RESEARCH FRAMEWORK , 1996 .

[21]  Philippa Ward,et al.  Deshopping – the art of illicit consumption , 1999 .

[22]  Ralph L. Day,et al.  The hidden agenda of consumer complaining. , 1981 .

[23]  Jagdip Singh Consumer Complaint Intentions and Behavior: Definitional and Taxonomical Issues , 1988 .

[24]  J. Cope,et al.  Learning by doing – An exploration of experience, critical incidents and reflection in entrepreneurial learning , 2000 .

[25]  Richard J. Herrnstein,et al.  Crime and Human Nature , 1985 .

[26]  John C. Mowen,et al.  The influence of cardinal‐, central‐, and surface‐level personality traits on consumers' bargaining and complaint intentions , 2001 .

[27]  A Closer Look At the Influence of Age on Consumer Ethics , 1995 .

[28]  W. Sasser,et al.  The profitable art of service recovery. , 1990, Harvard business review.

[29]  Ronald J. Faber,et al.  In the mood to buy: Differences in the mood states experienced by compulsive buyers and other consumers , 1996 .

[30]  Robin M. Kowalski,et al.  Complaints and complaining: functions, antecedents, and consequences. , 1996, Psychological bulletin.

[31]  K. Douglas Hoffman,et al.  A CIT investigation of servicescape failures and associated recovery strategies , 2003 .

[32]  Valerie A. Valle,et al.  Dissatisfaction Attributions and Consumer Complaint Behavior , 1979 .

[33]  A. Strauss Basics Of Qualitative Research , 1992 .

[34]  M. A. Jolson Consumers as offenders , 1974 .

[35]  L. Harris,et al.  Jaycustomer behavior: an exploration of types and motives in the hospitality industry , 2004 .

[36]  Shankar Ganesan,et al.  Service failure and recovery: The impact of relationship factors on customer satisfaction , 2003 .

[37]  Edward Toomer,et al.  Qualitative Methods in Management Research , 1989 .

[38]  Anselm L. Strauss,et al.  Basics of qualitative research : techniques and procedures for developing grounded theory , 1998 .

[39]  Dennis E. Garrett,et al.  Dissatisfied consumers who complain to the Better Business Bureau , 1999 .

[40]  Michael R. Gottfredson,et al.  A general theory of crime. , 1992 .

[41]  Delroy L. Paulhus,et al.  Enhancement and Denial in Socially Desirable Responding , 1991 .

[42]  Barry J. Babin,et al.  Effects of moral cognitions and consumer emotions on shoplifting intentions , 1996 .

[43]  Mark A. Davis,et al.  A Typology of Retail Failures and Recoveries , 1993 .

[44]  Jagdip Singh Voice, exit, and negative word-of-mouth behaviors: An investigation across three service categories , 1990 .

[45]  W. Bearden,et al.  Attributions and Conformity in Illicit Consumption: The Mediating Role of Group Attractiveness , 2001 .

[46]  A. Bandura Social learning theory , 1977 .

[47]  J. Kolodinsky Complaints, redress, and subsequent purchases of medical services by dissatisfied consumers , 1993 .

[48]  R. Harmon,et al.  Consumer Complaints and Managerial Response: A Holistic Approach , 1983 .

[49]  B. Edvardsson Causes of customer dissatisfaction ‐ studies of public transport by the critical‐incident method , 1998 .

[50]  J. Boote Towards a comprehensive taxonomy and model of consumer complaining behaviour , 1998 .

[51]  Kau Ah Keng,et al.  Determinants of Consumer Complaint Behaviour , 1995 .

[52]  Richard Elliott,et al.  Addictive consumption: Function and fragmentation in postmodernity , 1994 .

[53]  L. Harris,et al.  The Consequences of Dysfunctional Customer Behavior , 2003 .

[54]  Mary Jo Bitner,et al.  Critical Service Encounters: The Employee's Viewpoint , 1994 .

[55]  J. Barry Mason,et al.  An Investigation of Influences on Consumer Complaint Reports , 1984 .

[56]  S. Fullerton,et al.  Consumer ethics: An assessment of individual behavior in the market place , 1996 .

[57]  M. L. Klotz,et al.  Complaining Behavior in Social Interaction , 1992 .

[58]  Michael D. Crino,et al.  Employee Sabotage: A Random or Preventable Phenomenon? , 1994 .

[59]  C. Fornell,et al.  An Exploratory Study of Assertiveness, Aggressiveness, and Consumer Complaining Behavior , 1979 .

[60]  M. S. Moyer Characteristics of Consumer Complainants: Implications for Marketing and Public Policy , 1984 .

[61]  Christine M. Pearson,et al.  Tit for Tat? The Spiraling Effect of Incivility in the Workplace , 1999 .

[62]  Rene Dentiste Mueller,et al.  Service in the restaurant industry: an American and Irish comparison of service failures and recovery strategies. , 2003 .

[63]  Mary Jo Bitner,et al.  Self-Service Technologies: Understanding Customer Satisfaction with Technology-Based Service Encounters , 2000 .

[64]  David C. Aron Consumer Grudgeholding: Toward a Conceptual Model and Research Agenda , 2001 .

[65]  B. Lewis,et al.  Service Failure and Recovery in UK Theme Parks: The Employees' Perspective , 2001 .

[66]  Kyoko Fukukawa,et al.  Developing A Framework for EthicallyQuestionable Behavior in Consumption , 2002 .

[67]  Manfred F. Maute,et al.  The structure and determinants of consumer complaint intentions and behavior , 1993 .

[68]  P. Filiatrault,et al.  Understanding complaining responses through consumers' self‐consciousness disposition , 2002 .

[69]  M. Leary,et al.  Blowhards, Snobs, and Narcissists , 1997 .

[70]  Stefan Michel Analyzing service failures and recoveries: a process approach , 2001 .

[71]  F. Piron,et al.  Retail borrowing: insights and implications on returning used merchandise , 2000 .

[72]  M. Morganosky,et al.  Complaint Behavior: Analysis By Demographics, Lifestyle, and Consumer Values , 1987 .

[73]  M. Patton,et al.  Qualitative evaluation and research methods , 1992 .

[74]  Charles L. Martin Consumer-to-Consumer Relationships: Satisfaction with Other Consumers' Public Behavior , 1996 .

[75]  Peter D. Bennett,et al.  Consumer and industrial buying behavior , 1978 .

[76]  S. Beatty,et al.  Service Failure in Online Retailing , 2003 .

[77]  W. Bearden,et al.  Correlates of conformity in the consumption of illicit drugs and alcohol , 1994 .

[78]  R. B. Woodruff,et al.  Modeling Consumer Satisfaction Processes Using Experience-Based Norms: , 1983 .

[79]  Beverley Sparks,et al.  The Role of Gender in Reactions to Service Failure and Recovery , 2003 .

[80]  A. Mattila The effectiveness of service recovery in a multi‐industry setting , 2001 .

[81]  Jack P. Gibbs,et al.  Crime and Human Nature by James Q. Wilson and Richard J. Herrnstein. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1985. , 1985 .

[82]  John C. Mowen,et al.  The Impact of Perceived Justice on Customer Satisfaction and Intention to Complain in a Service Recovery , 1997 .

[83]  R. Bennett Anger, catharsis, and purchasing behavior following aggressive customer complaints , 1997 .

[84]  J. C. Flanagan Psychological Bulletin THE CRITICAL INCIDENT TECHNIQUE , 2022 .

[85]  R. Johnston The determinants of service quality: satisfiers and dissatisfiers , 1995 .

[86]  L. J. Harrison‐Walker E‐complaining: a content analysis of an Internet complaint forum , 2001 .

[87]  A. Palmer,et al.  Equity and repurchase intention following service failure , 2000 .

[88]  Kyoko Fukukawa,et al.  Developing a framework for ethically questionable behaviour in consumption. , 2002 .

[89]  R. M. Terry,et al.  Conceptual and theoretical issues in the study of deviance , 1988 .

[90]  T. Lang,et al.  The food shopping experience of older consumers in Scotland: critical incidents , 2001 .

[91]  J. E. Russo Consumer Satisfaction/Dissatisfaction: an Outsider's View , 1979 .

[92]  A. O'Leary-Kelly,et al.  Monkey See, Monkey Do: The Influence of Work Groups on the Antisocial Behavior of Employees , 1998 .

[93]  T. Lam,et al.  Customer complaint behaviour towards hotel restaurant services , 2003 .

[94]  Mary Owen Cameron The booster and the snitch : department store shoplifting , 1964 .

[95]  Bernard Pras,et al.  “Friendly” Complaining Behaviors: Toward a Relational Approach , 1999 .

[96]  C. Rusbult,et al.  IMPACT OF EXCHANGE VARIABLES ON EXIT, VOICE, LOYALTY, AND NEGLECT: AN INTEGRATIVE MODEL OF RESPONSES TO DECLINING JOB STATUS SATISFACTION. , 1988 .

[97]  Marsha L. Richins An Analysis of Consumer Interaction Styles in the Marketplace , 1983 .

[98]  Girish N. Punj,et al.  Repercussions of promoting an ideology of consumption: consumer misbehavior , 2004 .

[99]  D. Bailey Recovery from Customer Service Shortfalls , 1994 .

[100]  Mary Jo Bitner,et al.  The Service Encounter: Diagnosing Favorable and Unfavorable Incidents: , 1990 .

[101]  D. Mick,et al.  Are Studies of Dark Side Variables Confounded by Socially Desirable Responding? The Case of Materialism , 1996 .

[102]  V. Mitchell,et al.  Investigating UK Consumers' Unethical Attitudes and Behaviours , 2002 .

[103]  Claire P. Bolfing How do Customers Express Dissatisfaction and What can Service Marketers do About it , 1989 .