Keywords
cultural models, recovery expectations
Abstract
Service recovery research remains conflicted in its understanding of consumers’ recovery expectations and of why similar goods or service failures may lead to different recovery expectations. The authors argue that this conflict results from the assumption that consumer recovery expectations are monolithic and largely homogeneous, driven mainly by behavioral, relational, or contextual stimuli. Instead, recovery scenarios involving high-involvement (i.e., self-relevant) goods and service failures may activate closely held, identity-related cultural models that, though ultimately applied to regain balance (a foundational schema), differ according to their sociocultural heritage and create a range of unique consumer recovery preferences. The authors empirically identify three embodied cultural models—relational, oppositional, and utilitarian—that consumers apply to goods or service failures. Furthermore, the authors discuss implications for service recovery research and services marketing practice and introduce adaptive service recovery diagnostics that enable providers to identify and respond to consumers' varying recovery preferences.
Original Publication Citation
G.L. Christensen, T. Ringberg, G. Odekerken-Schroder. "A Cultural Models Approach to Service Recovery Expectations", Journal of Marketing 7, 27.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Christensen, Glenn L.; Odekerken-Schröder, Gaby; and Ringberg, Torsten, "A Cultural Models Approach to Service Recovery" (2007). Faculty Publications. 952.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/952
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2007-07-01
Permanent URL
http://hdl.lib.byu.edu/1877/2678
Publisher
American Marketing Association
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Management
Department
Management
Copyright Status
© 2011 American Marketing Association.
Copyright Use Information
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