Does Customer Demotion Jeopardize Loyalty?

Tillmann Wagner, 1

1Tillmann Wagner is Assistant Professor of Marketing, Rawls College of Business, Texas Tech University.


Thorsten Hennig-Thurau, 2

2Thorsten Hennig-Thurau is Professor of Marketing and Media, Department of Marketing and Media Research, Bauhaus-University of Weimar, and Honorary Visiting Professor of Movie Marketing, Cass Business School, London.


Thomas Rudolph3

3Thomas Rudolph is Professor of Marketing and International Retail Management, Institute of Marketing and Retailing, University of St. Gallen.




Abstract

Hierarchical loyalty programs award elevated customer status (e.g., “elite membership”) to consumers who meet a predefined spending level. However, if a customer subsequently falls short of the required spending level, firms commonly revoke that status. The authors investigate the impact of such customer demotion on loyalty intentions toward the firm. Building on prospect theory and emotions theory, the authors hypothesize that changes in customer status have an asymmetric negative effect, such that the negative impact of customer demotion is stronger than the positive impact of status increases. An experimental scenario study provides evidence that loyalty intentions are indeed lower for demoted customers than for those who have never been awarded a preferred status, meaning that hierarchical loyalty programs can drive otherwise loyal customers away from a firm. A field study using proprietary sales data from a different industry context demonstrates the robustness of the negative impact of customer demotion. The authors test the extent to which design variables of hierarchical loyalty programs may attenuate the negative consequences of status demotions with a second experimental scenario study and present an analytical model that links status demotion to customer equity to aid managerial decision making.

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