Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Customer engagement, buyer‐seller relationships, and social media
View through CrossRef
PurposeThe advent of the internet and in particular the interactive features of Web 2.0 in recent years have led to an explosion of interest in customer engagement. The opportunities presented by social media to help build close relationships with customers seem to have excited practitioners in a wide variety of industries worldwide. Academic scholarship on customer engagement, however, has lagged practice and its theoretical foundation is relatively underdeveloped and a better understanding of the concept is essential to develop strategies for customer engagement. This paper seeks to address some of these issues.Design/methodology/approachThe paper attempts to enhance understanding of customer engagement by examining practitioner views of customer engagement, linking it to the marketing concept, market orientation, and relationship marketing, modeling the customer engagement cycle, and developing a customer engagement matrix.FindingsThe paper develops a model of the customer engagement cycle with connection, interaction, satisfaction, retention, loyalty, advocacy, and engagement as stages in the cycle. It arrays customers in a customer engagement matrix according to the degree of relational exchange and emotional bonds that characterize their relationship with sellers. Four types of relationships emerge: transactional customers, delighted customers, loyal customers, and fans.Research limitations/implicationsThe paper is an initial attempt to develop a theoretical framework for customer engagement and further research is required to better understand several aspects of the framework. Future research can also investigate questions stemming from this research, for instance, how different Web 2.0 tools may be used to build customer engagement in consumer and business markets.Practical implicationsCustomer engagement turns customers into fans. But for customers to become fans they have to progress through the stages of the customer engagement cycle. In addition to current fans, sellers need a mix of transactional, delighted, and loyal customers who can be turned into fans in the future. A mix of digital and nondigital technologies can be employed to facilitate customers' transition through the stages in the customer engagement cycle.Originality/valueThe paper develops a conceptual model of customer engagement that improves understanding of the concept and provides the foundation for strategies to better satisfy customers using Web 2.0 tools like social media.
Title: Customer engagement, buyer‐seller relationships, and social media
Description:
PurposeThe advent of the internet and in particular the interactive features of Web 2.
0 in recent years have led to an explosion of interest in customer engagement.
The opportunities presented by social media to help build close relationships with customers seem to have excited practitioners in a wide variety of industries worldwide.
Academic scholarship on customer engagement, however, has lagged practice and its theoretical foundation is relatively underdeveloped and a better understanding of the concept is essential to develop strategies for customer engagement.
This paper seeks to address some of these issues.
Design/methodology/approachThe paper attempts to enhance understanding of customer engagement by examining practitioner views of customer engagement, linking it to the marketing concept, market orientation, and relationship marketing, modeling the customer engagement cycle, and developing a customer engagement matrix.
FindingsThe paper develops a model of the customer engagement cycle with connection, interaction, satisfaction, retention, loyalty, advocacy, and engagement as stages in the cycle.
It arrays customers in a customer engagement matrix according to the degree of relational exchange and emotional bonds that characterize their relationship with sellers.
Four types of relationships emerge: transactional customers, delighted customers, loyal customers, and fans.
Research limitations/implicationsThe paper is an initial attempt to develop a theoretical framework for customer engagement and further research is required to better understand several aspects of the framework.
Future research can also investigate questions stemming from this research, for instance, how different Web 2.
0 tools may be used to build customer engagement in consumer and business markets.
Practical implicationsCustomer engagement turns customers into fans.
But for customers to become fans they have to progress through the stages of the customer engagement cycle.
In addition to current fans, sellers need a mix of transactional, delighted, and loyal customers who can be turned into fans in the future.
A mix of digital and nondigital technologies can be employed to facilitate customers' transition through the stages in the customer engagement cycle.
Originality/valueThe paper develops a conceptual model of customer engagement that improves understanding of the concept and provides the foundation for strategies to better satisfy customers using Web 2.
0 tools like social media.
Related Results
Implementation of Notary House Employment Agreements in the Selling of Land and Building
Implementation of Notary House Employment Agreements in the Selling of Land and Building
The research entitled "Implementation of Notary House Vacationing Agreements in the Sale and Purchase of Land and Buildings in Randudongkal Pemalang Regency", in order to find out ...
Komunikasi Bisnis melalui Social Media Trust guna Meningkatkan Customer Engagement pada Pixy Cosmetic
Komunikasi Bisnis melalui Social Media Trust guna Meningkatkan Customer Engagement pada Pixy Cosmetic
Abstract. Building business communication through Social media trust to increase Customer engagement becomes an interesting discussion. Because nowadays business communication is r...
The combined effect of customer perceptions about a salesperson’s adaptive selling and selling orientation on customer trust in the salesperson: a contingency perspective
The combined effect of customer perceptions about a salesperson’s adaptive selling and selling orientation on customer trust in the salesperson: a contingency perspective
Purpose
This paper aims to examine the impact of customer perceptions about a salesperson’s combined use of adaptive selling (AS) and selling orientation (SO) on customer trust in ...
Trust and Distrust in E-Commerce
Trust and Distrust in E-Commerce
Trust is the key ingredient for sustainable transactions. In the concept of trust, the trustor trusts the trustees. In e-commerce, the trustor is the buyer and the trustees are the...
The Impact of Customer Service Quality on Customer Satisfaction: A study on Bangladeshi Banks
The Impact of Customer Service Quality on Customer Satisfaction: A study on Bangladeshi Banks
Abstract
This research study examines the impact of customer service quality on customer satisfaction at Bangladeshi Banks. The study aimed to fill existing gaps in underst...
The intertwined relationships of power, justice and dependence
The intertwined relationships of power, justice and dependence
Purpose– The purpose of this study, drawing from exchange theory, is to examine how the intertwined relationships between power, justice and relative dependence influence relations...
Seller-buyer networks in NFT art are driven by preferential ties
Seller-buyer networks in NFT art are driven by preferential ties
Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) have recently surged to mainstream attention by allowing the exchange of digital assets via blockchains. NFTs have also been adopted by artists to sell d...
Customer size and customer profitability in non‐contractual relationships
Customer size and customer profitability in non‐contractual relationships
PurposeThe profitability of individual customers can show substantial variation, both in money amounts and in margins (percentages). The literature suggests that larger customers h...

