Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality

The emergence of e-banking and intense competition in premium banking services have essentially evolved the way banks have conventionally conducted their business and the way customers interact with banks. Consequently, banks are increasingly confronted with the conundrum: customers may appreciate t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laksamana, Patria
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Curtin University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/637
_version_ 1848743436340953088
author Laksamana, Patria
author_facet Laksamana, Patria
author_sort Laksamana, Patria
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The emergence of e-banking and intense competition in premium banking services have essentially evolved the way banks have conventionally conducted their business and the way customers interact with banks. Consequently, banks are increasingly confronted with the conundrum: customers may appreciate the convenience of e-banking but as they migrate away from conventional banking mediums, the extent of personal interaction with bank staff –and in the case of premium banking services their Relationship Managers –decreases as do switching costs and, ultimately, long-term customer commitment.While the constructs of commitment and trust have been widely applied in relationship marketing studies, there is a need for a more comprehensive model and more objective measurement of continuance commitment. In response, based on payment equity theory and social exchange theory, as well as logical arguments from previous research, this thesis extends Morgan and Hunt’s (1994) commitment–trust model into a single model that encompasses moderating effects such as switching costs and interaction quality as well as continuance commitment in the form of retention and cross-buying. It is important to study customer retention and cross-buying simultaneously, as they have been studied separately in previous research. The purpose of the study is thus to examine the roles of switching costs and interaction quality along with other key relational variables that influence customer retention and cross-buying behaviour in the premium banking services sector.Primary data for the study were collected from 525 bank customers in a large metropolitan area in Australia. The study identifies the importance of switching costs and interaction quality and their relationship with trust, reputation and expertise for continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). Regression analysis and MANOVA were used to test the hypotheses. The analyses of the findings of this thesis provide support to the model and, in the main, support the hypotheses. The results confirm that while reputation and expertise have a positive impact on retention, they do not affect cross-buying. Only trust has a positive impact on both retention and cross-buying. To further investigate the roles of switching costs and interaction quality, investigation was carried out to examine if these two constructs moderate the relationship between trust and continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). The results confirm that although switching costs have no impact on retention, they do affect cross-buying. Conversely, interaction quality has a positive impact on retention, but no effect on cross-buying. Hence, it can be concluded that customer retention is not necessarily translated into cross-buying.Primary data for the study were collected from 525 bank customers in a large metropolitan area in Australia. The study identifies the importance of switching costs and interaction quality and their relationship with trust, reputation and expertise for continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). Regression analysis and MANOVA were used to test the hypotheses. The analyses of the findings of this thesis provide support to the model and, in the main, support the hypotheses. The results confirm that while reputation and expertise have a positive impact on retention, they do not affect cross-buying. Only trust has a positive impact on both retention and cross-buying. To further investigate the roles of switching costs and interaction quality, investigation was carried out to examine if these two constructs moderate the relationship between trust and continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). The results confirm that although switching costs have no impact on retention, they do affect cross-buying. Conversely, interaction quality has a positive impact on retention, but no effect on cross-buying. Hence, it can be concluded that customer retention is not necessarily translated into cross-buying.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T05:45:32Z
format Thesis
id curtin-20.500.11937-637
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T05:45:32Z
publishDate 2012
publisher Curtin University
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-6372017-02-20T06:41:05Z Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality Laksamana, Patria continuous commitment expertise premium banking services trust reputation interaction quality retention switching costs cross-buying The emergence of e-banking and intense competition in premium banking services have essentially evolved the way banks have conventionally conducted their business and the way customers interact with banks. Consequently, banks are increasingly confronted with the conundrum: customers may appreciate the convenience of e-banking but as they migrate away from conventional banking mediums, the extent of personal interaction with bank staff –and in the case of premium banking services their Relationship Managers –decreases as do switching costs and, ultimately, long-term customer commitment.While the constructs of commitment and trust have been widely applied in relationship marketing studies, there is a need for a more comprehensive model and more objective measurement of continuance commitment. In response, based on payment equity theory and social exchange theory, as well as logical arguments from previous research, this thesis extends Morgan and Hunt’s (1994) commitment–trust model into a single model that encompasses moderating effects such as switching costs and interaction quality as well as continuance commitment in the form of retention and cross-buying. It is important to study customer retention and cross-buying simultaneously, as they have been studied separately in previous research. The purpose of the study is thus to examine the roles of switching costs and interaction quality along with other key relational variables that influence customer retention and cross-buying behaviour in the premium banking services sector.Primary data for the study were collected from 525 bank customers in a large metropolitan area in Australia. The study identifies the importance of switching costs and interaction quality and their relationship with trust, reputation and expertise for continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). Regression analysis and MANOVA were used to test the hypotheses. The analyses of the findings of this thesis provide support to the model and, in the main, support the hypotheses. The results confirm that while reputation and expertise have a positive impact on retention, they do not affect cross-buying. Only trust has a positive impact on both retention and cross-buying. To further investigate the roles of switching costs and interaction quality, investigation was carried out to examine if these two constructs moderate the relationship between trust and continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). The results confirm that although switching costs have no impact on retention, they do affect cross-buying. Conversely, interaction quality has a positive impact on retention, but no effect on cross-buying. Hence, it can be concluded that customer retention is not necessarily translated into cross-buying.Primary data for the study were collected from 525 bank customers in a large metropolitan area in Australia. The study identifies the importance of switching costs and interaction quality and their relationship with trust, reputation and expertise for continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). Regression analysis and MANOVA were used to test the hypotheses. The analyses of the findings of this thesis provide support to the model and, in the main, support the hypotheses. The results confirm that while reputation and expertise have a positive impact on retention, they do not affect cross-buying. Only trust has a positive impact on both retention and cross-buying. To further investigate the roles of switching costs and interaction quality, investigation was carried out to examine if these two constructs moderate the relationship between trust and continuance commitment (retention and cross-buying). The results confirm that although switching costs have no impact on retention, they do affect cross-buying. Conversely, interaction quality has a positive impact on retention, but no effect on cross-buying. Hence, it can be concluded that customer retention is not necessarily translated into cross-buying. 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/637 en Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle continuous commitment
expertise
premium banking services
trust
reputation
interaction quality
retention
switching costs
cross-buying
Laksamana, Patria
Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality
title Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality
title_full Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality
title_fullStr Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality
title_full_unstemmed Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality
title_short Customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality
title_sort customer retention and cross-buying in premium banking services : the roles of switching costs and interaction quality
topic continuous commitment
expertise
premium banking services
trust
reputation
interaction quality
retention
switching costs
cross-buying
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/637