Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ?

In today’s highly competitive market environment, service providers are beginning to recognize that customer referral plays an important role in enhancing firm value through cost-effective acquisition of new customers. While a significant body of research has focused on exploring customer referral,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stein, A., Ramaseshan, Balasubramani
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage Publications 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19853
_version_ 1848750147623714816
author Stein, A.
Ramaseshan, Balasubramani
author_facet Stein, A.
Ramaseshan, Balasubramani
author_sort Stein, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In today’s highly competitive market environment, service providers are beginning to recognize that customer referral plays an important role in enhancing firm value through cost-effective acquisition of new customers. While a significant body of research has focused on exploring customer referral, surprisingly limited research to date has addressed how customer referral may vary for different customer groups, particularly among switchers and stayers. This article examines the moderating effect of switchers and stayers on the relationships between service quality and perceived value on customer referral behavior. Actual referral data were collected from 441 customers of an Internet Service Provider in two waves for this study. The results show that the effects of positive changes in service quality and perceived value on customer referral behavior are stronger for recently acquired customers (switchers) than for long-term customers (stayers). The findings of the study suggest that investment in service quality and value improvements yield significantly higher returns (through greater customer referrals) for switchers than for stayers. Based on the findings, the authors recommend that service managers should identify and target newly acquired customers, who have switched from different service providers, right from the outset of the relationship with service offerings that signify higher quality and value in order to maximize customer referrals.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:32:13Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-19853
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:32:13Z
publishDate 2015
publisher Sage Publications
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-198532017-09-13T15:34:01Z Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ? Stein, A. Ramaseshan, Balasubramani In today’s highly competitive market environment, service providers are beginning to recognize that customer referral plays an important role in enhancing firm value through cost-effective acquisition of new customers. While a significant body of research has focused on exploring customer referral, surprisingly limited research to date has addressed how customer referral may vary for different customer groups, particularly among switchers and stayers. This article examines the moderating effect of switchers and stayers on the relationships between service quality and perceived value on customer referral behavior. Actual referral data were collected from 441 customers of an Internet Service Provider in two waves for this study. The results show that the effects of positive changes in service quality and perceived value on customer referral behavior are stronger for recently acquired customers (switchers) than for long-term customers (stayers). The findings of the study suggest that investment in service quality and value improvements yield significantly higher returns (through greater customer referrals) for switchers than for stayers. Based on the findings, the authors recommend that service managers should identify and target newly acquired customers, who have switched from different service providers, right from the outset of the relationship with service offerings that signify higher quality and value in order to maximize customer referrals. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19853 10.1177/1094670514563495 Sage Publications fulltext
spellingShingle Stein, A.
Ramaseshan, Balasubramani
Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ?
title Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ?
title_full Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ?
title_fullStr Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ?
title_full_unstemmed Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ?
title_short Customer Referral Behavior: Do Switchers and Stayers Differ?
title_sort customer referral behavior: do switchers and stayers differ?
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19853