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The Effects of Digital Marketing on Customer Relationships
The Effects of Digital Marketing on Customer Relationships

... customers cost-effectively. It seems like the concept of “digital marketing” has been used more operationally, while the theoretical understanding and comprehensive models of how and why to use different digital channels are still developing. Despite the growing use of ICT in marketing, there are fe ...
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... often organize the knowledge into similar object categories. Attitudes towards products do not always mean making purchase, but they may change over time and that is why they are so important when designing marketing. Memories form a great storage of information and knowledge about services, product ...
IOSR Journal of Business and Management (IOSR-JBM) e-ISSN: 2278-487X, p-ISSN: 2319-7668. www.iosrjournals.org
IOSR Journal of Business and Management (IOSR-JBM) e-ISSN: 2278-487X, p-ISSN: 2319-7668. www.iosrjournals.org

... “Long run consumer welfare,” emphasizing that the short term desires might not support the consumer’s long term interest or be good for the society as whole. Therefore the product categories classified in societal marketing in terms of long term benefits and immediate satisfaction are: Deficient pro ...
Factors influencing customer loyalty in Malaysian petrol stations
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... through the mediating effect of customer satisfaction. The paper also investigates the moderating effect of petrol station location on the relationship between satisfaction and loyalty. Using convenience non-probability sampling, data was collected from 223 customers of petrol stations using self-ad ...
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... other type of) business assets must be absorbed, transformed and leveraged as part of some organization process if they are to convert inputs into products or solutions that customers desire—and thus, generate economic value for the organization (Lehmann, 1997; Srivastava, Shervani & Fahey, 1999). ...
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... preference map but could be represented as a line (or an arrow) going from the least preferred objects towards the most preferred ones • Unfolding approach • Decompose all preference orderings for a given set of objects (products) so that the same products can be represented in a lower dimensional s ...
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... by providing “quality, variety, and freshness throughout its stores,” along with the promise to make the lives of its customers easier by offering quick, courteous service aligned with its customers’ needs. The company also knows the importance of being involved in its customers’ communities, and it ...
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How to Measure and Manage Customer Value and

... to better understanding each customer’s unique preferences and what he or she can afford. You may even need to better understand your customer’s customer. Traditional marketing measures such as market share and sales growth are being expanded to more reflective measures of marketing performance, such ...
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Customer Relationship Marketing and its Influence on Customer
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... banks today are working in a highly competitive and rapidly changing work environment, with not only competing among each other but also with other financial institutions. Most banks’ product developments are easy to duplicate and they provide nearly identical services (Caroline et al., 2014). There ...
Competing On Customer Intelligence
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... technology has matured to empower marketers to make smarter decisions. It’s all about harnessing the power of the digital information that’s piling up all around us. Never before could marketers compile so much information about customers and markets, transfer that information into actionable knowle ...
Full Article - Journal of Research for Consumers
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... assists consumers in satisfactorily achieving their consumption projects. The mission of JRC is to provide information to individuals to enable them to better understand and perform their roles as consumers - "better" in this sense referring to consumers' perceptions as opposed to those of other par ...
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View PDF - CiteSeerX

... The Underlying Idea Within the scope of this paper, we define customer value from a supplier-oriented point of view as the customer’s economic value to the company, a definition which differs from the frequently employed demand-oriented view of customer value as the company’s or its products’ value ...
Impact of Relationship Marketing on Customer Loyalty
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... and their customers to link relationship marketing implementation with customer loyalty in the context of retailing. This study revealed that actual relationship marketing implementation may not be as important as the customers' perception towards relationship marketing effort to the development of ...
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... More important, the work of service scholars has resulted in a number of modifications in the way value creation and exchange are conceptualized, which have now become superordinated to their G-D conceptualizations for all of marketing. For example, service marketing scholars in the USA (e.g., Berry ...
Understanding Relationship Marketing and Loyalty Program
Understanding Relationship Marketing and Loyalty Program

... development in addition to culture. Culture, which develops and endures over centuries (Hofstede, Hofstede, and Minkov 2010), has been a primary focus of international marketing research (Sojka and Tansuhaj 1995), whereas economic development, which fluctuates more in the short run (Piketty 2014; Sc ...
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Advances in Environmental Biology
Advances in Environmental Biology

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... Background to the Study Archive-It Services is a commercial records centre (CRC) that offers both onsite and offsite records solutions to corporate organizations. The company was incorporated in 2002 and registered by the register of companies as a private limited company with a mandate to provide r ...
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GraceWorks Sales Manual - Precept Marketing Group

... coaching programs. The PSRS provided normed data on satisfaction and willingness to refer, both school overall and by subgroup. (Both are reported back as percentile scores, as with standardized tests.) Importantly, the PSRS precisely identifies areas of strengths and weaknesses, along with what pro ...
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Services marketing

Services marketing is a sub-field of marketing, which can be split into the two main areas of goods marketing (which includes the marketing of fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) and durables) and services marketing. Services marketing typically refers to both business to consumer (B2C) and business to business (B2B) services, and includes marketing of services such as telecommunications services, financial services, all types of hospitality services, car rental services, air travel, health care services and professional services.Services are (usually) intangible economic activities offered by one party to another. Often time-based, services performed bring about desired results to recipients, objects, or other assets for which purchasers have responsibility. In exchange for money, time, and effort, service customers expect value from access to goods, labor, professional skills, facilities, networks, and systems; but they do not normally take ownership of any of the physical elements involved.There has been a long academic debate on what makes services different from goods. The historical perspective in the late-eighteen and early-nineteenth centuries focused on creation and possession of wealth. Classical economists contended that goods were objects of value over which ownership rights could be established and exchanged. Ownership implied tangible possession of an object that had been acquired through purchase, barter or gift from the producer or previous owner and was legally identifiable as the property of the current owner.More recently, scholars have found that services are different than goods and that there are distinct models to understand the marketing of services to customers. In particular, scholars have developed the concept of service-profit-chain to understand how customers and firms interact with each other in service settings,Adam Smith’s famous book, The Wealth of Nations, published in Great Britain in 1776, distinguished between the outputs of what he termed ""productive"" and ""unproductive"" labor. The former, he stated, produced goods that could be stored after production and subsequently exchanged for money or other items of value. But unproductive labor, however"" honorable,...useful, or... necessary"" created services that perished at the time of production and therefore didn’t contribute to wealth. Building on this theme, French economist Jean-Baptiste Say argued that production and consumption were inseparable in services, coining the term ""immaterial products"" to describe them.
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