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Satisfaction, complaining behaviour and repurchase: an empirical study of a subscription service

conference contribution
posted on 2001-01-01, 00:00 authored by Lisa McQuilken, R Breth, Robin Shaw
The aims of this research were to examine the relationships between customer satisfaction, customer complaint behaviour, service recovery and the intention to repurchase in the Australian Pay TV industry. A survey of 171 respondents suggested that overall customer satisfaction was the main driver of the likelihood of disconnection from the Pay TV service. Those respondents who reported having a problem but not complaining directly about it were significantly more likely to have the intention to disconnect in the future than those who complained directly to their Pay TV service provider. However, there was no significant difference in terms of perceptions of overall satisfaction between those who had a problem and complained and those who had a problem and chose not to complain.

History

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy Conference 2001.

Event

Australian & New Zealand Marketing Academy. Conference (2001 : Auckland, New Zealand)

Pagination

1 - 7

Publisher

[Australian and New Zealand Academy of Marketing]

Location

Auckland, New Zealand

Place of publication

[Auckland, N.Z.]

Start date

2001-12-01

End date

2001-12-05

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2001

Editor/Contributor(s)

S Chetty, B Collins

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