articleJournal of MarketingMar 16, 2005Closed access

Do Satisfied Customers Really Pay More? A Study of the Relationship between Customer Satisfaction and Willingness to Pay

University of Mannheim · The University of Texas at Austin

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Abstract

Two experimental studies (a lab experiment and a study involving a real usage experience over time) reveal the existence of a strong, positive impact of customer satisfaction on willingness to pay, and they provide support for a nonlinear, functional structure based on disappointment theory (i.e., an inverse S-shaped form). In addition, the second study examines dynamic aspects of the relationship and provides evidence for the stronger impact of cumulative satisfaction rather than of transaction-specific satisfaction on willingness to pay.

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1,178
total citations
FWCI
42.91
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100%
References
102
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Willingness to pay
  • Disappointment
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Marketing
  • Business
  • Database transaction
  • Consumer satisfaction
  • Microeconomics
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