Extended-duration services evaluation: an exploratory study


Autoria(s): Gountas, Sandra; Shaw, Robin
Contribuinte(s)

Chetty, Sylvie

Collins, Brett

Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

There is a lack of research and literature concerned with services which are produced and delivered over substantial, sustained time periods. The growing Leisure Air Travel industry has a major component of extended–duration product (long-haul flights). In the existing literature, there is little or no distinction made between leisure and business travellers regarding their motivation and expectations, the duration of the service encounters and the travellers’ evaluation of the service. The authors propose that leisure and business travellers have distinct and differing motives for travelling which affect their service evaluation. The individual consumers’ characteristics, combined with industry conditions and the complex product component, mean that measuring consumer satisfaction, with leisure air travel, in a useful way is problematic. The authors suggest that a major part of the complexity of the product is that leisure air travel is a high-involvement, high-affect, extended service. In June 2000 and February 2001, exploratory research in the form of focus groups conducted using a total of 110 passengers from a United Kingdom leisure airline, revealed several important criteria used by consumers when evaluating service provision. The criteria are grouped into six factors: Hygiene, Service/Empathy, Psychological, Temporal, Personal Characteristics, and Situation Specifics. A new model for examining the relationships between the factors, the<br />airline and satisfaction evaluation is proposed.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30004506

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

ANZMAC

Relação

http://smib.vuw.ac.nz:8081/WWW/ANZMAC2001/anzmac/AUTHORS/pdfs/Gountas2.pdf

Direitos

2001 ANZMAC

Tipo

Conference Paper