Customer Loyalty in E-Commerce

2002 Journal of the Association for Information Systems 1,040 citations

Abstract

The high cost of attracting new customers on the Internet and the relative difficulty in retaining them make customer loyalty an essential asset for many online vendors. In the non-Internet marketplace customer loyalty is primarily the product of superior service quality and the trust that such service entails. This study examines whether the same applies with online vendors even though their service is provided by a website interface notably without a human service provider. As hypothesized, customer loyalty to a specific online vendor increased with perceived better service quality both directly and through increased trust. However, the data suggest that the five dimensions of service quality in SERVQUAL collapse to three with online service quality: (1) tangibles, (2) a combined dimension of responsiveness, reliability, and assurance, and (3) empathy. The first dimension is the most important one in increasing customer loyalty, and the second in increasing customer trust. Implications are discussed.

Keywords

BusinessService qualityLoyalty business modelCustomer retentionMarketingCustomer advocacyCustomer Service AssuranceVendorCustomer satisfactionService (business)Advertising

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Publication Info

Year
2002
Type
article
Volume
3
Issue
1
Pages
27-53
Citations
1040
Access
Closed

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David Gefen (2002). Customer Loyalty in E-Commerce. Journal of the Association for Information Systems , 3 (1) , 27-53. https://doi.org/10.17705/1jais.00022

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DOI
10.17705/1jais.00022