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Journal of Service Research
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Article

Who Wants a Relationship Anyway? Conditions When Consumers Expect a Relationship With Their Service Provider

Peter J. Danaher1*, Denise M. Conroy2, and Janet R. McColl-Kennedy3

1 Melbourne Business School
2 University of Auckland
3 University of Queensland

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: p.danaher{at}mbs.edu.


   Abstract
Prior research suggests that consumers may vary in the degree to which they wish to engage in a relationship with their service providers. The authors identify previously found and new factors that influence whether consumers expect a service provider to form a relationship with them. The authors then use these factors to segment consumers based on the relationship expectations they have with three universal categories of service providers: phone companies, banks, and doctors. Depending on the service type, either two or three segments emerge, ranging from consumers who are keen to have a relationship to those who are indifferent about relationships, down to those who are averse to forming relationships with service providers. Although there are always consumers who are keen to form a relationship with their service provider, there is no "hard core" group of consumers keen on relationships with all service providers.

First published on June 4, 2008, doi:10.1177/1094670508319095

Journal of Service Research 2008;11:43.

A more recent version of this article appeared on August 1, 2008


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