2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhm.2013.12.001
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Territoriality revisited: Other customer's perspective

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Cited by 44 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…As most hospitality service settings represent shared territory and space for customers, other customers' behaviors or misbehaviors can significantly affect the observing customer's emotional state, which in turn will affect the observing customer's satisfaction (Huang and Wang, 2014;Wu et al, 2014;Miao, 2014;Miao et al, 2011). It is found that people still consider other customer-caused failure to be the service provider's responsibility if the failure is under the provider's volitional control (Huang, 2008), and as such, recovery and compensation actions around other customer failure are likely to affect both customer emotions and fairness perceptions, which will further influence post-recovery satisfaction (Huang, 2008;Sparks and McColl-Kennedy, 2001;Wu et al, 2014).…”
Section: Locus Of Causality and Customer Satisfactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As most hospitality service settings represent shared territory and space for customers, other customers' behaviors or misbehaviors can significantly affect the observing customer's emotional state, which in turn will affect the observing customer's satisfaction (Huang and Wang, 2014;Wu et al, 2014;Miao, 2014;Miao et al, 2011). It is found that people still consider other customer-caused failure to be the service provider's responsibility if the failure is under the provider's volitional control (Huang, 2008), and as such, recovery and compensation actions around other customer failure are likely to affect both customer emotions and fairness perceptions, which will further influence post-recovery satisfaction (Huang, 2008;Sparks and McColl-Kennedy, 2001;Wu et al, 2014).…”
Section: Locus Of Causality and Customer Satisfactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, the Servuction model postulated by Langeard et al (1981) explicitly labeled other customers who may be present in the visible area as "Customer B". Recent empirical studies have also found that the presence and action of other customers can affect the focal customer's attitude and behavioral intention relating to the service experience (Huang and Wang, 2014;Wu et al, 2014). While there has been extensive research on the effect of service failure and recovery on the focal customer (Mattila and Cranage, 2005;Smith et al, 1999;Wirtz and Mattila, 2004), there are very few studies of how customers react to service failures and recovery strategies given to other customers (Zhang et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For this reason, this latest study recommends that moderators temper these results. According to Brocato et al (), who propose an OCP scale, three dimensions can be considered: perceived similarity (Wu et al, have already mentioned the role of this dimension on satisfaction, a finding confirmed by Afthinos, Theodorakis and Howat [], in the context of aquatic centres), the level of perceived normality of behaviour—that is, whether appropriate or not, confirmed by Afthinos et al []), and perceived physical appearance. Yi, Gong, and Lee () refer to credibility toward others, which, along with behavioural norms, affects the perception of co‐presence.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%