Opportunistic customer claiming during service recovery

Although a potentially significant issue to managers and academics alike, opportunistic customer behavior in the service recovery context has been largely ignored. A multi-stage research program, comprising actual customer claims (Study 1), in depth customer interviews (Study 2) and three experimental studies (Studies 3, 4, 5), explored opportunistic customer claiming behavior during service recovery and yielded robust findings across methods, contexts and samples. Potential determinants of opportunistic claiming in a service recovery context were identified by drawing on the justice, self-concept maintenance and neutralization theories. The findings support the hypothesis that when experiencing lower distributive, procedural and interactional justice, respondents were more likely to be opportunistic in their claiming. Furthermore, consumers were more likely to be opportunistic when dealing with large compared to small firms, and when they were in one-time transactions compared to when they had an established relationship with the firm. Finally, increased claiming in general, and opportunistic claiming in particular, did not lead to increased satisfaction with the service recovery.

[1]  C. Lovelock Product Plus: How Product + Service = Competitive Advantage , 1993 .

[2]  L. Berry,et al.  Serving unfair customers , 2008 .

[3]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[4]  Stephen S. Tax,et al.  The effects of distributive, procedural, and interactional justice on postcomplaint behavior , 1997 .

[5]  Maureen L. Ambrose,et al.  Sabotage in the workplace: The role of organizational injustice , 2002 .

[6]  R. Ping The effects of satisfaction and structural constraints on retailer exiting, voice, loyalty, opportunism, and neglect , 1993 .

[7]  B. Ashar,et al.  Deviant Behavior. , 2019, The Medical clinics of North America.

[8]  J. Greenberg Employee Theft as a Reaction to Underpayment Inequity: The Hidden Cost of Pay Cuts , 1990 .

[9]  Ruth N. Bolton,et al.  A Model of Customer Satisfaction with Service Encounters Involving Failure and Recovery , 1999 .

[10]  Dori LeCroy,et al.  Evolutionary perspectives on human reproductive behavior , 2000 .

[11]  L. Harris,et al.  Fraudulent Return Proclivity: An Empirical Analysis , 2008 .

[12]  Lance A. Bettencourt,et al.  Customer voluntary performance: Customers as partners in service delivery , 1997 .

[13]  G. Loewenstein,et al.  Behavioral Law and Economics: Explaining Bargaining Impasse: The Role of Self-serving Biases , 1997 .

[14]  Shalom H. Schwartz,et al.  Explanations of the moderating effect of responsibility denial on the personal norm behavior relationship. , 1980 .

[15]  Jochen Wirtz,et al.  Consumer Satisfaction with Services: Integrating the Environment Perspective in Services Marketing into the Traditional Disconfirmation Paradigm , 1999 .

[16]  Nina Mazar,et al.  The Dishonesty of Honest People: A Theory of Self-Concept Maintenance , 2008 .

[17]  James A. Muncy,et al.  Consumer ethics: An investigation of the ethical beliefs of the final consumer. , 1992 .

[18]  Louise Young,et al.  The Role of Trust and Co‐operation in Marketing Channels: A Preliminary Study , 1989 .

[19]  R C Gur,et al.  Self-deception, other-deception, and self-reported psychopathology. , 1979, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

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

[21]  Kiran Karande,et al.  Recovery Voice and Satisfaction After Service Failure , 2007 .

[22]  Wujin Chu,et al.  Managing Dissatisfaction , 1998 .

[23]  Jochen Wirtz,et al.  Consumer cheating on service guarantees , 2004 .

[24]  M. Rahim,et al.  A measure of styles of handling interpersonal conflict. , 1983, Academy of Management journal. Academy of Management.

[25]  Ruth N. Bolton,et al.  The effect of customers' emotional responses to service failures on their recovery effort evaluations and satisfaction judgments , 2002 .

[26]  Jochen Wirtz,et al.  Services Marketing: People, Technology, Strategy , 2000 .

[27]  Kate L. Daunt,et al.  Customers behaving badly: a state of the art review, research agenda and implications for practitioners , 2010 .

[28]  Paul G. Patterson,et al.  Customer rage episodes: Emotions, expressions and behaviors , 2009 .

[29]  R. Trivers The Elements of a Scientific Theory of Self‐Deception , 2000, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[30]  Joseph P. Cannon,et al.  An Examination of the Nature of Trust in Buyer–Seller Relationships: , 1997 .

[31]  Dan Ariely,et al.  Dishonesty in Everyday Life and Its Policy Implications , 2006 .

[32]  Susan M. Keaveney,et al.  Customer Switching Behavior in Service Industries: An Exploratory Study , 1995 .

[33]  Clay M. Voorhees,et al.  A Service Perspective on the Drivers of Complaint Intentions , 2005 .

[34]  Susan M. Keaveney,et al.  Customer Switching Behavior in Service Industries , 1995 .

[35]  Uri Gneezy,et al.  Deception: The Role of Consequences , 2005 .

[36]  Sabotage in the Workplace , 2000 .

[37]  R. Paternoster,et al.  Sanction threats and appeals to morality : Testing a rational choice model of corporate crime , 1996 .

[38]  Jochen Wirtz,et al.  Consumer responses to compensation, speed of recovery and apology after a service failure , 2004 .

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

[40]  Lou E. Pelton,et al.  How consumers may justify inappropriate behavior in market settings: An application on the techniques of neutralization , 1994 .

[41]  Beverley Sparks,et al.  Justice strategy options for increased customer satisfaction in a services recovery setting , 2001 .

[42]  C. Goodwin,et al.  Consumer responses to service failures: Influence of procedural and interactional fairness perceptions , 1992 .

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

[44]  J. E. Swan,et al.  Consumer perceptions of interpersonal equity and satisfaction in transactions: A field survey approach. , 1989 .

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

[46]  Stephen S. Tax,et al.  Recovering and Learning from Service Failure , 1998 .

[47]  Aodheen O'Donnell,et al.  Entrepreneurs at the Interface and their Attitude to Risk , 2004 .

[48]  Chun Hui,et al.  The influence of role conflict and self-interest on lying in organizations , 1994 .

[49]  R. Christie,et al.  Studies in Machiavellianism , 1970 .

[50]  Gresham M. Sykes,et al.  Techniques of neutralization: A theory of delinquency. , 1957 .

[51]  G. P. Stone,et al.  City Shoppers and Urban Identification: Observations on the Social Psychology of City Life , 1954, American Journal of Sociology.

[52]  Nina Mazar,et al.  More Ways to Cheat – Expanding the Scope of Dishonesty , 2008 .

[53]  Stephen S. Tax,et al.  Customer Evaluations of Service Complaint Experiences: Implications for Relationship Marketing , 1998 .

[54]  Timothy C. Johnston,et al.  Fixing service failures , 1997 .

[55]  Bernhard F. Frey,et al.  The Impact of Moral Intensity on Decision Making in a Business Context , 2000 .

[56]  L. Harris,et al.  When service failure is not service failure: an exploration of the forms and motives of “illegitimate” customer complaining , 2005 .

[57]  T. Jones Ethical Decision Making by Individuals in Organizations: An Issue-Contingent Model , 1991 .