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Personal acquaintances and salespeople in financial services: Differences between customers and friends

journal contribution
posted on 2009-06-01, 00:00 authored by L Backstrom, L Pitt, C Campbell, Deon Nel
The existence, benefit and management of customer–salesperson relationships in the marketing of financial services are topics of increasing interest. Much of the sales and marketing literature implies that because of time spent together, salespeople and some of their customers develop close relationships that are akin to friendships. Evidence from social psychology confirms that strong relationships are founded in deep knowledge of others gained over long periods after sharing personal information. This paper reports on the results of a study of salespeople's assessments of their personal acquaintance with customers and friends in a financial services setting. The results indicate that salespeople do not classify customers as friends on all the dimensions of personal acquaintance. Furthermore, the nature of personal acquaintance differs between ‘good’ customers (those salespeople enjoy serving), and ‘bad’ (those they do not), with the exception of the personal acquaintance dimensions of interaction frequency and personal disclosure. We discuss the implications for practice and make recommendations for future research.<br>

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Location

Basingstoke, England

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Journal of financial services marketing

Volume

14

Pagination

26 - 39

ISSN

1363-0539

eISSN

1479-1846

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