KOREASCHOLAR

IS AN APOLOGY ENOUGH TO RECOVER FROM A MOBILE APPLICATION SERVICE FAILURE? INVESTIGATING THE EFFECT OF PERCEIVED FIRM REMORSE AND CUSTOMER EMPATHY ON CUSTOMER COPING BEHAVIOR

Wen-Hai Chih, Kai-Yu Wang, Li-Chun Hsu, Wei-Ching Lin
  • LanguageENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/351865
Global Marketing Conference
2018 Global Marketing Conference at Tokyo (2018.07)
p.1556
글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 (Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations)
Abstract

Offering an apology is one of the common service failure recovery strategies. Previous studies focused on examining the effectiveness of apology from the customer perspective. It is not clear whether and how customers perceive firm remorse after an apology influence their blame attribution and coping behaviors. Integrating a cognitive-emotive model and an empathy model, this research proposes and empirically tests a remorse-empathy-coping model to explain how customers respond to apology after mobile application service failures occur. Specifically, this research examines how perceived firm remorse influences blame attribution and emotional empathy, which subsequently affects coping behaviors (revenge and avoidance) in the mobile app service recovery context. The moderating role of technology anxiety in the proposed model is also identified. Four hundred and fifty-two mobile application service users were recruited for a survey study and the Structural Equation Modeling was used in order to test the research hypotheses. Our findings show that perceived firm remorse negatively influences blame attribution but positively influences empathy. Empathy negatively affects revenge and avoidance behaviors. In addition, technology anxiety moderates the effect of perceived firm remorse on blame attribution. The negative effect of perceived firm remorse on blame attribution becomes weaker when technology anxiety increases.

Author
  • Wen-Hai Chih(National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan)
  • Kai-Yu Wang(Brock University, Canada)
  • Li-Chun Hsu(National Taitung University, Taiwan)
  • Wei-Ching Lin(Yung Ching Rehouse Co., Taiwan)