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Consumer territorial responses in service settings

Christy Ashley (College of Business, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island, USA)
Jonathan Ross Gilbert (College of Business, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island, USA)
Hillary A. Leonard (College of Business, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island, USA)

Journal of Services Marketing

ISSN: 0887-6045

Article publication date: 13 May 2020

Issue publication date: 3 September 2020

509

Abstract

Purpose

Customers can be territorial, which results in reactive behaviors that can hurt firm profitability. This study aims to expand the typology of customer territorial responses previously identified in the environmental psychology and marketing literature.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors use a mixture of quantitative and qualitative approaches. The exploratory studies elicit and test a typology of consumer territorial responses using critical incident technique and factor analysis. Two surveys use the typology. Study 1 examines intrusiveness in grocery store settings. Study 2 expands the model with specialty store shoppers to examine how rapport, employee greed, entitlement and time pressure interact with intrusion pressure and relate to customer territorial responses.

Findings

The results indicate a new category of territorial responses – deferential verbalizations – and show relationships between intrusion pressure and deferential actions, retaliatory verbalizations, retaliatory actions and abandonment. The relationships are affected by the moderators, including rapport, which interacts with intrusion pressure to increase the likelihood of switching.

Research limitations/implications

Collecting data near closing time restricted observations and consumer time to participate using self-report data. The results should be replicated with other populations and service providers.

Practical implications

Managers should monitor customer treatment during closing time. The results indicate consumer responses to closing time cues not only impact their shopping trip but also affect whether they will patronize the store in the future.

Originality/value

The study provides an expanded typology of territorial responses, identifies moderating factors that may affect responses and links employee intrusiveness and territorial responses to store patronage.

Keywords

Citation

Ashley, C., Gilbert, J.R. and Leonard, H.A. (2020), "Consumer territorial responses in service settings", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 34 No. 5, pp. 651-663. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSM-03-2019-0102

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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