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The relationship between service quality and customer satisfaction – a factor specific approach
887
Citations
22
References
2002
Year
Total Quality ManagementCustomer SatisfactionFactor Specific ApproachService QualityService ResearchService ExcellenceManagementBusinessQuality CharacteristicService MarketingViews Customer SatisfactionMarketingCustomer LoyaltyCustomer ServiceMarketing Strategy
The relationship between service quality and customer satisfaction has attracted considerable academic attention, yet uncertainty remains about their exact relationship and how each construct is operationalized, with researchers using both single‑item and multi‑item scales. The study treats customer satisfaction as a multi‑dimensional construct, operationalized along the same factors and items used for service quality. Based on this approach, the link between service quality and customer satisfaction has been investigated. The results have indicated that the two constructs are indeed independent but are closely related, implying that an increase in one is likely to lead to an increase in another.
The relationship between service quality and customer satisfaction has received considerable academic attention in the past few years. But the nature of the exact relationship between service quality and customer satisfaction (especially in the way the two constructs have been operationalized) is still shrouded with uncertainty. Many researchers have operationalized customer satisfaction by using a single item scale and many others have used multiple item scales. The present study adopts a different approach and views customer satisfaction as a multi dimensional construct just as service quality, but argues that customer satisfaction should be operationalized along the same factors (and the corresponding items) on which service quality is operationalized. Based on this approach, the link between service quality and customer satisfaction has been investigated. The results have indicated that the two constructs are indeed independent but are closely related, implying that an increase in one is likely to lead to an increase in another.
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