TY - JOUR
T1 - Loyalty Formation for Different Customer Journey Segments
AU - Herhausen, Dennis
AU - Kleinkercher, Kristina
AU - Verhoef, Peter C.
AU - Emrich, Oliver
AU - Rudolph, Thomas
PY - 2019/9
Y1 - 2019/9
N2 - The proliferation of new touchpoints empowers today's customers to design their own journey from search to purchase. To address this new complexity, we segment customers by their use of specific touchpoints in the customer journey, investigate the association of several covariates with segment membership, consider the rise of mobile devices as potential "game changers" of existing segments, and explore how the relationships among product satisfaction, journey satisfaction, customer inspiration, and customer loyalty differ across segments. Based on anticipated utility theory and using latent class analyses on large-scale data from two samples of 2,443 and 2,649 journeys, we identify five time-consistent segments-store-focused shoppers, pragmatic online shoppers, extensive online shoppers, multiple touchpoint shoppers, and online-to-offline shoppers-that differ considerably in their touchpoint and mobile device usage, their segment-specific covariates, and their search and purchase patterns. The five segments remain unchanged in the two data sets even though the usage of mobile devices has increased substantially. Furthermore, we find that the relationships between various loyalty antecedents and customer loyalty differ between the segments. The insights from this paper help retailers develop segment-specific customer journey strategies. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of New York University.
AB - The proliferation of new touchpoints empowers today's customers to design their own journey from search to purchase. To address this new complexity, we segment customers by their use of specific touchpoints in the customer journey, investigate the association of several covariates with segment membership, consider the rise of mobile devices as potential "game changers" of existing segments, and explore how the relationships among product satisfaction, journey satisfaction, customer inspiration, and customer loyalty differ across segments. Based on anticipated utility theory and using latent class analyses on large-scale data from two samples of 2,443 and 2,649 journeys, we identify five time-consistent segments-store-focused shoppers, pragmatic online shoppers, extensive online shoppers, multiple touchpoint shoppers, and online-to-offline shoppers-that differ considerably in their touchpoint and mobile device usage, their segment-specific covariates, and their search and purchase patterns. The five segments remain unchanged in the two data sets even though the usage of mobile devices has increased substantially. Furthermore, we find that the relationships between various loyalty antecedents and customer loyalty differ between the segments. The insights from this paper help retailers develop segment-specific customer journey strategies. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of New York University.
KW - Customer journey
KW - Customer satisfaction
KW - Customer inspiration
KW - Touchpoints
KW - Omnichannel management
KW - Customer segmentation
KW - MODERATING ROLE
KW - IMPACT
KW - PRODUCT
KW - BRAND
KW - INSPIRATION
KW - EXPERIENCE
KW - PURCHASE
KW - WEBSITE
KW - SEARCH
KW - MODEL
U2 - 10.1016/j.jretai.2019.05.001
DO - 10.1016/j.jretai.2019.05.001
M3 - Article
SN - 0022-4359
VL - 95
SP - 9
EP - 29
JO - Journal of Retailing
JF - Journal of Retailing
IS - 3247
ER -