Author:
Atav Gizem,Chatterjee Subimal,Kuru Basak
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to explore how authentic corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities can serve as a proactive service recovery tool and shield service providers from the negative consequences of service failures. Specifically, the authors investigate the conditions under which such activities can encourage conciliatory behavior among aggrieved consumers and how adding reactive service recovery tools to the mix interferes with the process.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors conduct three experiments on an online panel and college student participants. The authors present a service failure scenario at a restaurant (late/subpar food delivery); vary the restaurant’s CSR activity (authentic, inauthentic or nonexistent); and test CSR’s impact on conciliatory behavior, the underlying mechanisms and how reactive service recovery tactics (apology/compensation) moderate the process.
Findings
The authors find that authentic-CSR activities (relative to inauthentic or no-CSR activities) indirectly promote conciliatory behavior by (serially) making the failure appear as a onetime event and lessening consumer anger toward the service provider. However, the process gets disrupted when the authors add an apology/compensation to the mix, ostensibly because the latter is a more direct signal that the failure is a onetime problem.
Originality/value
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study that tests how authentic-CSR activities can serve as a proactive service recovery tool and encourage conciliatory behavior among aggrieved consumers (a serial mediation process). The authors add value by showing that the process cuts across cultures (with participants from the USA and Turkey) and that CSR activities are indispensable when customers do not complain but simply exit the firm.
Subject
Marketing,Business and International Management
Reference90 articles.
1. Corporate social responsibility and customer retention: evidence from the telecommunication industry in Ghana;Journal of Consumer Marketing,2021
2. Aflac (2019), “Investing today for a better tomorrow: 2019 corporate social responsibility report”, available at: www.aflac.com/docs/about-aflac/2019-csr-report/aflac-2019-csr-report.pdf
3. Corporate social responsibility: the effect of green practices in a service recovery;Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research,2017
4. Corporate social responsibility authenticity: investigating its antecedents and outcomes;Journal of Business Research,2016
5. Consumers complain – does business respond;Harvard Business Review,1977
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献