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A signaling theory approach to relationship recovery

Husni Kharouf (Coventry University, Coventry, UK)
Donald J. Lund (Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA)
Alexandra Krallman (University of North Carolina at Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina, USA)
Chris Pullig (School of Business, Baylor University Hankamer, Waco, Texas, USA)

European Journal of Marketing

ISSN: 0309-0566

Article publication date: 29 June 2020

Issue publication date: 31 August 2020

2378

Abstract

Purpose

Drawing on signaling theory, the purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of the strength and framing of firm signals sent to repair relationships following relationship violations.

Design/methodology/approach

Three 2 × 2 scenario-based experiments (total n = 527) manipulate signal strength × violation type (Study 1); signal frame × violation type (Study 2); and signal strength × brand familiarity (Study 3) to examine their dynamic impacts on relationship recovery efforts.

Findings

Stronger signals are more effective at relationship repair and are especially important following integrity (vs competence) violations. Signals framed as customer gains (vs firm costs) lead to more favorable relationship outcomes. Finally, brands that are less (vs more) familiar see greater benefits from strong signals.

Research limitations/implications

The three experiments were scenario-based, which may not replicate real-life behavior or capture participants’ actual emotions following a violation, thus future research should extend into real-world recovery efforts.

Practical implications

Managers should send strong signals (communicating the level of resources invested in the recovery efforts) framed as benefits to the customer, rather than costs to the firm. Strong signals are especially important when brand familiarity is low or an integrity violation has occurred.

Originality/value

This is the first research to directly apply signaling theory to the relationship recovery process and contributes to theory by examining the role of signal strength; framing of the signal as a customer gain vs firm cost; and the interplay of signal strength and brand familiarity on the relationship recovery effort.

Keywords

Citation

Kharouf, H., Lund, D.J., Krallman, A. and Pullig, C. (2020), "A signaling theory approach to relationship recovery", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 54 No. 9, pp. 2139-2170. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-10-2019-0751

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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