Abstract
This article examines the received wisdom of services marketing and challenges the validity and continued usefulness of its core paradigm, namely, the assertion that four specific characteristics—intangibility, heterogeneity, inseparability, and perishability—make services uniquely different from goods. An alternative paradigm is proposed, based on the premise that marketing exchanges that do not result in a transfer of ownership from seller to buyer are fundamentally different from those that do. It posits that services offer benefits through access or temporary possession, instead of ownership, with payments taking the form of rentals or access fees. This rental/access perspective offers a different lens…
Citation impact
1,227
total citations
- FWCI
- 55.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 146
Citations per year
Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Perishability
- Business
- Marketing
- Renting
- Services marketing
- Premise
- Possession (linguistics)
- Payment
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