Contagious Effects of Customer Misbehaviour in Access-Based Services

Tobias Schaefers, Kristina Wittkowski, Sabine Benoit, Rosellina Ferraro

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Customer misbehavior in service settings is problematic for two reasons: (1) because of the direct damage it causes and (2) because of additional negative effects that arise from the contagion of such misbehavior. The authors extend existing theory of customer misbehavior by studying its contagious effect. The investigation focuses on access-based services, defined as transactions in which multiple consumers successively gain temporal, short-term access to a good, while legal ownership remains with the service provider (e.g., car sharing and fashion rentals). Due to the nature of these services, they are especially prone to indirect customer misbehavior, which is directed at the accessed product and occurs in the absence of others. Two online experiments provide the first empirical evidence for a contagiousness of misbehavior and reveal that this effect is driven by customers perceptions of the social norms among the customer group. Moreover, they indicate that greater strength of the accessed products brand as well as lower anonymity of the accessed products owner attenuate contagion. A field experiment shows that an increase in the communal identification among access-based service customers reverses the contagious effect, with customers more likely to remove signs of previous users misbehavior. The results suggest that access-based service providers should address customer misbehavior by (a) investing in the products they offer access to, (b) establishing more personal relationships with customers, and, foremost, (c) increasing communal identification among customers.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3-21pp
    JournalJournal of Service Research
    Volume19
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2016

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