1. Customer dissatisfaction among older consumers: a mixed-methods approach.
- Author
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CAMERON, MICHAEL P., RICHARDSON, MARGARET, and SIAMEJA, SIALUPAPU
- Subjects
AGING ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CUSTOMER satisfaction ,CUSTOMER relations ,FOCUS groups ,GROUNDED theory ,INCOME ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,TELEPHONES ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,QUALITATIVE research ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,QUANTITATIVE research ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,DATA analysis software ,DIARY (Literary form) ,MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Worldwide, populations are ageing and consequently so are the consumer profiles for most organisations. Understanding how best to ensure satisfaction in interactions with older customers, patients, members of organisations, and so on is therefore increasingly important. This paper examines two research questions: (a) How satisfied or dissatisfied are older people with their customer service experience, and what are the factors associated with dissatisfaction? and (b) What prompts older people to want to change service providers? The research questions are addressed using a mixed-methods approach – quantitative analysis of observation logs, supported by illustrative quotes from focus groups. We find that on the whole older people are generally satisfied with their interactions with organisations, although a substantial minority of interactions lead to dissatisfaction or lower-than-expected satisfaction. Dissatisfaction with interactions is mostly associated with impersonal communications, including interactions that are not conducted face to face, and those that are one-off interactions rather than repeated interactions. Media and communications firms prompted the greatest levels of dissatisfaction among older consumers. Dissatisfied older consumers from our sample are more than 12 times more likely to report an intention to switch providers than satisfied consumers. This highlights the potential costs to organisations of poor customer interactions with older people. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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