Suchergebnisse
Filter
Format
Medientyp
Sprache
Weitere Sprachen
Jahre
50498 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Customer Supply Center : [catalog]
Description based on: Fall 1998; title from cover. ; Mode of access: Internet.
BASE
Customer service marketing: managing the customer experience
"This timely book is a comprehensive overview of customer service principles, theories, and practices. It looks at the best practices of service enterprises and the delivery of superior customer service. It also includes classic and contemporary theories relating to the consumers, managers, and their behaviors in organizational setting. The book uses real life applications through examples from business enterprises in various service sectors including hotels, restaurants, theme parks, event management, airlines, cruises, (e-)retailers, finance. The book covers important concepts in service design and delivery including customer experiences, peer-to-peer services, the organization's servicescape, quality measurement tools, and use of technologies. The book also gives insights into consumers including their expectations, attitudes, emotions, word-of-mouth behaviors, and strategies to ensure their loyalty. It also looks at developments in service theory and practice which remain relatively unexplored by existing textbooks. Filled with real-world case studies in various service sectors, this textbook will be particularly useful for students in hospitality guest services and services marketing"--
Customs
In: Journal of international economics, Band 96, Heft 1, S. 119-137
ISSN: 0022-1996
Customer accounting: creating value with customer analytics
In: SpringerBriefs in Accounting Ser
This book is designed to meet the needs of CFOs, accounting and financial professionals interested in leveraging the power of data-driven customer insights in management accounting and financial reporting systems. While academic research in Marketing has developed increasingly sophisticated analytical tools, the role of customer analytics as a source of value creation from an Accounting and Finance perspective has received limited attention. The authors aim to fill this gap by blending interdisciplinary academic rigor with practical insights from real-world applications. Readers will find thorough coverage of advanced customer accounting concepts and techniques, including the calculation of customer lifetime value and customer equity for internal decision-making and for external financial reporting and valuation. Beyond a professional audience, the book will serve as ideal companion reading for students enrolled in undergraduate, graduate, or MBA courses.
Customs Union. Customs Regulations (Russian Language)
Erscheinungsjahre: 2011-2013 (elektronisch)
Constructing customer knowledge in knowledge‐intensive customer relationships
In: Knowledge and process management: the journal of corporate transformation ; the official journal of the Institute of Business Process Re-engineering, Band 27, Heft 4, S. 251-261
ISSN: 1099-1441
AbstractKnowing your customers and their needs is a topic that has attracted increasing interest in the business and academic worlds. In line with this, constructing customer knowledge has come under examination in this study. A firm's ability to construct customer knowledge creates solid ground for responding better to its customers' needs. In the business‐to‐business markets, customers are demanding increasingly knowledge‐intensive services. Therefore, examining the topic is particularly important in this specific context. In this study, the purpose is to find out how customer knowledge is constructed in knowledge‐intensive customer relationships. To accomplish this purpose, a qualitative multiple case study is organized around seven case relationships allowing within‐case and cross‐case comparisons. The findings of this study describe a variety of practices knowledge‐intensive firms can utilize in constructing customer knowledge in their daily activities. This study helps KIBS organizations in their efforts to create a source of competitive advantage as customer knowledge is a critical asset for firms, especially in a fast‐changing knowledge‐intensive environment.
PENGARUH CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE TERHADAP CUSTOMER SATISFACTION DAN CUSTOMER LOYALTY INSTITUT FRANÇAIS INDONESIA DI SURABAYA
French as the second official language in the United Nations plays an essential rule in communication as a foreign language among professional and intercommunication. Institut Français Indonesia in Surabaya has an essential role in providing quality and reliable French language courses. Its presence during these five decades was so meaningful to Surabaya until early 2012, and the French government decided to make changes in the management and implementation of operational policies. Background of the research on the effect of customer experience on customer satisfaction and customer loyalty Institut Français Indonesia in Surabaya was based on the declining number of students during 2012-2014. In this study, 66 students from the advanced class in May and June as respondents. The results of this study were analyzed using path analysis. Customer experience significant effect on customer satisfaction directly by 0.967 with a positive direction, as well as the customer experience significant effect on customer loyalty directly at 0.479 with the positive direction. Customer satisfaction has a significant effect on customer loyalty at 0.485 with positive direction. P
BASE
The Relationship between Customer Satisfaction and Customer Trust on Customer Loyalty
In: International journal of academic research in business and social sciences: IJ-ARBSS, Band 7, Heft 4
ISSN: 2222-6990
Dislocating Custom
In: Political and legal anthropology review: PoLAR, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 91-107
ISSN: 1555-2934
This article approaches the relationship between the categories of custom and law by means of an experiment with cartographic metaphors of scale and location. In Papua New Guinea, the relationship of custom to law is configured by the canonization of custom (the concept as it is known in studies of legal pluralism) in the Constitution of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea and in the Underlying Law Act 2000. However, the status of this universalizing category is complicated by its relationship to the putatively local category of kastom, as it is known throughout Papua New Guinea. I argue that the two categories, custom and kastom, do not share an equivalent relationship to law because they occupy different levels of scale. In the discourses of legal elites, custom encompasses kastom. Whereas for many "smaller‐scale" ethnic and language groups within the country, kastom and law are simply two potential categories of efficacious action, among many others, in highly specific and localized "mixes." These mixes lose their intelligibility when elites attempt to replicate them at the level of the state.
Online customer-to-customer interactions, customer–firm affection, firm-loyalty and participation intention
In: Asia Pacific journal of marketing and logistics, Band 32, Heft 8, S. 1717-1735
ISSN: 1758-4248
PurposeThis study aims to investigate the impact of three types of online customer-to-customer interaction qualities on customers' participation intention through customer–firm affection in online mass service contexts to address the influence of several types of intercustomer interactions.Design/methodology/approachThe data were amassed using retrospective experience sampling. The hypothesized relationships were examined utilizing structural equation modeling.FindingsThe results demonstrate that the perceived quality of the friend-interaction (e.g. [non-]verbal online interaction with friends), neighboring customer-interaction (e.g. [non-]verbal online interaction with stranger users) and the audience-interaction (crowding) has a significant impact upon customer participation intention, mediated by customer–firm affection.Research limitations/implicationsThis research was performed in the situation of online mass services (e.g. massively multiplayer online role-playing games). Future studies could extend the findings by conducting further studies across various types of services and by comparing results across different categories of mass services (e.g. hedonic vs utilitarian).Practical implicationsOnline mass service marketers should focus on facilitating all three types of online customer-to-customer interactions (i.e. friend-, neighboring customer-, and audience-interaction). For example, online game developers may need to require users to communicate and collaborate with not only friends but also stranger users to progress and succeed in online multiplayer games.Originality/valueThe current study differs from prior research by addressing the influences of not only online intercustomer interaction qualities but also customer–firm affection on customer participation intention.
Customs Administration
In: Russian Economy in 2020. Trends and Outlooks. Issue. 42. Moscw. IEP. 2021. P. 4
SSRN