Are Women More Loyal Customers Than Men? Gender Differences in Loyalty to Firms and Individual Service Providers
1Valentyna Melnyk is Lecturer in Marketing, Waikato Management School, University of Waikato.
vmelnyk@mngt.waikato.ac.nzStijn M.J. van Osselaer, 2
2Stijn M.J. van Osselaer is Professor of Marketing, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University.
sosselaer@rsm.nlTammo H.A. Bijmolt3
3Tammo H.A. Bijmolt is Professor of Marketing Research, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Groningen.
t.h.a.bijmolt@rug.nlAbstract
Prevailing wisdom assumes that female consumers are more loyal than male consumers. The authors report conditions under which the reverse is found, depending on the object of customer loyalty. For example, whereas female consumers tend to be more loyal than male consumers to individuals, such as individual service providers, this difference is reversed when the object of loyalty is a group of people. The authors find a similar crossover interaction effect for loyalty to individual employees versus loyalty to companies. This effect is mediated by self-construal in terms of relational versus collective interdependence. The authors discuss the managerial and theoretical implications of these gender differences.
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