Publication | Closed Access
Functional vs relational benefits: what matters most in affinity marketing?
30
Citations
50
References
2014
Year
Customer SatisfactionConsumer StudyConsumer ResearchBrand StrategyConsumer EngagementAffinity Credit CardsManagementHospitality MarketingMarketing CommunicationConsumer BehaviorBrand ManagementRelational BenefitsRelationship MarketingConsumer Decision MakingMarketing TheoryAffinity MarketingMarketingSports MarketingInteractive MarketingBusinessBusiness StrategyMarketing ManagementMarketing Insights
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to classify and compare the importance of the benefits consumers derive from affinity credit card programmes. Design/methodology/approach – A random sample of affinity credit card holders of a major Greek athletic club (AC) was surveyed and a multi-group structural equation model was run to assess the hypothesised relationships among the study constructs. Findings – Overall, the relational benefits of affinity credit cards outperform the functional ones. However, this finding depends on the number of additional credit cards held by affinity credit card holders. Originality/value – The study is the first one to test formally the viability of a core services marketing theory (relational benefits) within the affinity marketing field as a means of explaining consumer behaviour within such a context.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1