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Consumers’ propensity for rollover service contracts: the influences of perceived value, convenience and trust on service loyalty

Consumers’ propensity for rollover service contracts: the influences of perceived value, convenience and trust on service loyalty
Consumers’ propensity for rollover service contracts: the influences of perceived value, convenience and trust on service loyalty

Rollover contracts are becoming increasingly commonplace in a range of service markets. Such contracts automatically renew for a further term when a contractual period comes to an end. Rollover contracts represent a unique form of loyalty, because a consumer who signs a rollover contract at the time of initial purchase, signals a commitment to stay loyal to the firm before they have even experienced the service delivery. Prior studies of automatic renewal have predominantly been undertaken in the domain of consumer economics, and the psychological dimension of buyer decision making has yet to be explored. The desire for convenience was found to have the strongest influence on consumers’ propensity for rollover service contracts. Additionally, trust as a mediator of reputation, and perceived value also influence consumers’ attitudes and behavioral intentions for selecting these products. It is concluded that service providers should ensure that consumers recognize that there is an element of reciprocity which is mutually beneficial to both parties in the provision of such contracts.

Automatic renewal, Convenience, Perceived value, Service contracts, Service loyalty, Trust
0965-254X
1-16
Wilkins, Stephen
ecc8e544-d0a6-4283-a795-37444ad3e8c8
Hazzam, Joe
974f19f7-d424-42a3-959b-d3781cf430f0
Megicks, Phil
5330ca01-abb8-4e41-b079-07c1e7656336
Wilkins, Stephen
ecc8e544-d0a6-4283-a795-37444ad3e8c8
Hazzam, Joe
974f19f7-d424-42a3-959b-d3781cf430f0
Megicks, Phil
5330ca01-abb8-4e41-b079-07c1e7656336

Wilkins, Stephen, Hazzam, Joe and Megicks, Phil (2021) Consumers’ propensity for rollover service contracts: the influences of perceived value, convenience and trust on service loyalty. Journal of Strategic Marketing, 1-16. (doi:10.1080/0965254X.2021.1946127).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Rollover contracts are becoming increasingly commonplace in a range of service markets. Such contracts automatically renew for a further term when a contractual period comes to an end. Rollover contracts represent a unique form of loyalty, because a consumer who signs a rollover contract at the time of initial purchase, signals a commitment to stay loyal to the firm before they have even experienced the service delivery. Prior studies of automatic renewal have predominantly been undertaken in the domain of consumer economics, and the psychological dimension of buyer decision making has yet to be explored. The desire for convenience was found to have the strongest influence on consumers’ propensity for rollover service contracts. Additionally, trust as a mediator of reputation, and perceived value also influence consumers’ attitudes and behavioral intentions for selecting these products. It is concluded that service providers should ensure that consumers recognize that there is an element of reciprocity which is mutually beneficial to both parties in the provision of such contracts.

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Consumers propensity for rollover service contracts - published version - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 June 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 June 2021
Keywords: Automatic renewal, Convenience, Perceived value, Service contracts, Service loyalty, Trust

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 450443
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/450443
ISSN: 0965-254X
PURE UUID: 8df5b68b-8f1f-4a4a-87d1-8b8ce6debca8
ORCID for Phil Megicks: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7826-1927

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Jul 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:41

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Contributors

Author: Stephen Wilkins
Author: Joe Hazzam
Author: Phil Megicks ORCID iD

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