Publication | Closed Access
Customer orientation, social consensus and insurance salespeople's tolerance of customer insurance frauds
25
Citations
65
References
2013
Year
Fraud DetectionCustomer SatisfactionCustomer ExperienceConsumer ResearchConsumer FraudMarketing PhilosophyAttitude TheoryService QualityCustomer Insurance FraudsBiasHospitality MarketingManagementConsumer BehaviorCustomer InvolvementInsuranceService PeopleInsurance SalespeopleConsumer ProtectionConsumer Decision MakingService ResearchSocial ConsensusMarketingCustomer LoyaltyCustomer MisconductBusinessInsurance FraudPersuasion
Purpose – The idea of customer orientation is widely recognized by service people. However, there has been a lack of investigation into how the recognition of customer orientation may affect the service people's attitudes toward customer misconducts. As a result, our knowledge about the potential impacts of customer orientation philosophy on the ethical decisions made by service people could be insufficient. Hence, by using the life insurance salespeople in Taiwan as an example, the purpose of this paper is to investigate service people's tolerance of two types of customer misconduct (opportunistic frauds and planned frauds) and how those service people would react to the customer misconduct based on their marketing philosophy (customer orientation), perceived fraud size and perceived social consensus.
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