Abstract
Purpose This study aims to determine the main antecedents of customer engagement (market orientation, satisfaction, emotions and self-brand connection) and the relationship between customer engagement and customer loyalty in the retail-banking context. Design/methodology/approach A theoretical model of effects is tested using dyadic methodology, based on 225 dyads (bank branch manager–average of five branch customers). The authors use structural equation modelling (EQS 6.1) to test the relationships. Findings The results reveal a strong relationship between customer engagement and customer loyalty. Satisfaction is the main antecedent of customer engagement. Self-brand connection and emotions during the service also have a significant influence. Finally, branch market orientation has a positive influence on satisfaction and emotions. Research limitations/implications The first concerns the transversal data used. Geographical context is the second limitation. Third, the study sample only included customers with experience of the financial services of a specific bank (online customers are not included). Finally, the dyads are based on the opinion of the branch manager, on one hand, and an average of five customers per branch, on the other. Practical implications The combination of the branding strategy at the corporate level and the relationship marketing strategy at branch office level creates a situation in which customer engagement and customer loyalty can thrive. The communication campaigns designed to promote the brand image and associate brand values with the personality of the banks’ current and potential customers help to create an emotional bond that represents a switching cost for the customer. The moments of truth in branch offices are crucial aspects in the retail bank strategy. Originality/value First, from the conceptual perspective, it establishes a direct relationship between customer engagement and customer loyalty. Second, it empirically tested Pansari and Kumar’s (2017) customer engagement framework, which establishes customer satisfaction and customer emotions as the antecedents of customer engagement. Third, the study took an innovative step in establishing two levels of customer emotions in the retail bank context: emotions generated by corporate branding and emotions that arise during the experience of purchase and consuming. Fourth, the study shows that the market orientation adopted not at the macro corporate level but at the individual branch level is crucial to the generation of positive relational outcomes in the service the customer receives. The fifth contribution is related to the fact that the research streams associated with market orientation and relationship quality have traditionally been studied in isolation.
Highlights
The retail banking industry has undergone major changes in the past years, leading to mergers and the entry of new online financial operators that clearly differ from traditional banking businesses (Csikosová et al, 2016)
Our study aims to take a further step by examining an additional question: to what extent does the degree to which branches adopt an intensive marketing focus affect the generation of these two antecedent variables? This aspect is generally considered in the literature to be covered by the construct of market orientation (Kohli and Jaworski, 1990; Narver and Slater, 1990). 3.2.1 Customer satisfaction and customer engagement
7.1 Theoretical contributions This study aimed to explore the main antecedents of customer engagement and the relationship between customer engagement and customer loyalty in the retail-banking context
Summary
The retail banking industry has undergone major changes in the past years, leading to mergers and the entry of new online financial operators that clearly differ from traditional banking businesses (Csikosová et al, 2016). These changes have led to growing concerns about profitability and productivity in banks, which have introduced marketing strategies designed to attract and retain customers (Gensler et al, 2013). Dimensionality and consequences have all been analysed (Oliver, 1999; Kumar et al, 2013); in recent years other pertinent areas of study have emerged in the literature and are attracting growing interest. One such area of recent interest is the role customer engagement plays in forming customer loyalty (Kumar et al, 2013; Thakur, 2016; Kosiba et al, 2018; Moliner et al, 2018; Parihar et al, 2019)
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