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The moderating effect of normative commitment on the service quality-customer retention relationship

Gordon Fullerton (Sobey School of Business, Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada)

European Journal of Marketing

ISSN: 0309-0566

Article publication date: 8 April 2014

4937

Abstract

Purpose

Limited attention has been given to the effects of normative commitment (NC) in a marketing relationship. This paper investigates the effects of service quality and normative commitment on customer retention in a consumer-retailer relationship.

Design/methodology/approach

Two distinct studies; a longitudinal experiment and a SEM model were conducted to tease out the normative commitment-service quality interaction on customer switching intentions in services.

Findings

Both studies supported the existence of a significant normative commitment-service quality interaction on switching, in addition to the main effects of both variables.

Research limitations/implications

The longitudinal experiment has the limitation of being a simple test of theory in a controlled setting. Study II validates this theory in a real-world retail services setting, but there are questions about the extent to which the relationship may hold in other service sectors. The results indicate that the effect of service quality on customer loyalty is moderated by normative commitment. This may also allow us to think about customer commitment in a new way in that it could be a construct rooted in attitude confidence rather than attitude.

Practical implications

The findings allow practitioners to recognize that the development of obligation-based normative commitment can give them a basis for successful competition against other firms, even those that may outperform them on other salient attributes, including basic service quality.

Originality/value

This is one of a very small number of studies in the discipline that have examined the effects of normative commitment and the first that has demonstrated that normative commitment moderates the service quality-service customer retention relationship. This opens the door for the possibility that other forms of commitment may moderate the relationship between service quality and customer retention.

Keywords

Citation

Fullerton, G. (2014), "The moderating effect of normative commitment on the service quality-customer retention relationship", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 48 No. 3/4, pp. 657-673. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-06-2011-0333

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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