What do our customers know? This is the fundamental question in customer knowledge management (CKM), which emerged during the first decade of 21st century as the corporations’ main advantage in making co-creation value. In this study, we explain why CKM is important, how it could have an impact on loyalty, and its influence on making co-creation value. We will describe the main concepts related to the topic and how to gain data that are useful in CKM process. At the end of the article, we illustrate a conceptual framework of CKM process and describe the components. In addition, we offer ways of increasing customer’s knowledge quality that we call mass public education.
Purpose
Customer reaction to failure is of essential importance and varies by level of involvement with products and services. Thus, the purpose of this paper is to use the FCB grid to examine effects of involvement and emotion on failure of products and services. It also explores effects of negative word-of-mouth, consumer advocacy, customer voicing and gender on the so-called silent killers.
Design/methodology/approach
A 2 (male or female)×4 (high and low involvement, feelings, thinking in FCB grid) between-subjects experiment on 311 college students, who have recently experienced product failure, is performed.
Findings
Results reveal that customers with different levels of involvement react differently to product failure. Furthermore, low-involvement products are more likely to develop silent killers. The results also show that silent killer is more common among men.
Originality/value
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, no similar study is performed on the relationship between involvement and failure of products or services. In addition, this attempt is the first quantitative study to examine the phenomenon of silent killers in this field.
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