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        검색결과 3

        1.
        2018.07 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        This study investigates the relationship between B&B customers’ perceived service quality, satisfaction and repurchase intention. Based on literature review, the customers and managers of selected B&Bs in some Chinese provinces were interviewed for additional sub-dimension possibility for the SERVPERF model and a service recovery sub-dimension was thus added. A questionnaire consisting of 40 questions were designed, using a fivepoint Likert-type scale ranging from “1” reflecting "strongly disagree" to “5” "strongly agree". This study collected data via an online survey platform “WJX” from experienced Chinese B&B customers’ who had staying in a B&B at least once in a B&B in China one year prior to data collection. A pilot test was conducted and some of the question items were slightly amended for easier understanding. In March 2017, the main survey was conducted and 356 questionnaires were received. This study contributes to the body of knowledge in two folds. It not only unveils customers’ perceived service quality in a rapidly developing B&B industry in China but also offers B&B owners/managers insights on how to better engage their customers in enhancing their satisfaction and ultimately repurchase intention. Some conclusions can be drawn from this study. First, the B&Bs in China should pay attention to improving customers’ perceived service quality by optimizing their marketing network and channels to facilitate better internal exchange among B&B owners/managers. Second, it is advisable to strengthen the training of service providers in instilling the importance of service recovery and to actively communicate with the in-house guests to enhance customer satisfaction. Third, the B&Bs should offer quality service to not only improve customer satisfaction as a whole but also enhance customers’ willingness to return. Lastly, the B&Bs should bring local characteristics of "people" into play, relying on local products and service resources, deepening the cultural connotation of the B&B.
        2.
        2018.07 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        This study examines the impact of emotional intelligence on the complaint handling process and outcome in the Chinese hotel setting. The results of the study indicate that the TARP model can be applied to China's hotel environment; “network evaluation” has become an important factor in assessing the severity of complaints. Besides, the negotiation and communication methods need to be adaptive in the context of Chinese consumer culture, and the complaints in the hotel environment should be handled immediately. Compared with the negative cases, the frequency of emotional intelligence application in positive cases is higher in every aspect of the TARP model. For the first time, the qualitative case study method is applied to similar research topics, and the application of various dimensions of emotional intelligence in hotel complaint handling process is thoroughly explored. This study not only has theoretical contributions but also serves as a reference for hotels to formulate a high-quality complaint handling standard operating procedure
        3.
        2018.07 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        Since the late 1980s, information communication and technology (ICT) have reshaped the landscape of the tourism industry (Buhalis & Law, 2008). Thanks to the Web 2.0 technology, tourism practitioners have never been this close to their customers over social media platforms. According to Kaplan and Haenlein (2010), social media refers to “a group of Internet-based applications which build on the ideological and technological foundations of Web 2.0 and that allow the creation and exchange of User Generated Content” (p. 61). In line with this definition, electronic social networks, user-generated content aggregators, as well as location-based applications are all typical social media platforms, across which enable customers to create, edit, and share content. The increasingly growing social media platforms have greatly facilitated implementations of customer engagement strategies for organizations. As a psychological state, customer engagement is featured by interactive customer experiences with an organization, which encourage psychological, emotional, and physical investment a customer has in the organization (Harrigan, Evers, Miles, & Daly, 2017). In the tourism and hospitality context, customer engagement strategies are as critical in strengthening customer loyalty, trust, and brand evaluations (So, King, & Sparks, 2016). Useful insights have been gained relating to conceptualization and measurement scale of customer engagement, organizational and cultural obstacles to consumer engagement within hotel organizations (Chathoth et al., 2014), customer engagement in a social media context alongside the process of recognition (Cabiddu et al., 2014). Underlying the practical and theoretical significance of customer engagement lies the subjective nature of views on the social media platforms. Goh, Heng, and Lin (2014) recognized that engagement in social media brand communities positively lead to enhanced purchase expenditures through embedded information and persuasion. Quantitively, the persuasive effect of user generated information is at least 22 times more than that of marketer’s in terms of marginal effect. Although previous research has examined consequences of consumer engagement, there has been less attention paid to its causes. Meanwhile, as far as Brodie et al. (2011) were concerned, the persistency of consumer-brand engagement is contingent on an assessment of tangible and intangible costs against possible benefits such as product news and offers. Therefore, identification of these benefits can offer supplementary insights into current literature of consumer engagement. The current study utilizes the self-determination theory to uncover how engagement in social media activities is facilitated by consumers’ intrinsic motivators and what psychological benefits can consumer obtain from such engagement, as either psychological state or process (Brodie et al., 2011). Research subjects in this study are Chinese social media users. According to eMarketer’s (2017) estimated that more than 80 percent of Internet users in China (i.e., around 626 million people) accessed social networks regularly in 2017. The importance of tapping this massive market can never be overestimated.