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Consumer experience quality: A review and extension of the sport management literature
Institution:1. Faculty of Business & Law, Swinburne University, John St, Hawthorn, Victoria 3125, Australia;2. Sport & Recreation Management, School of Tourism & Hospitality Management, Temple University, United States;1. University of Regina, Canada;2. University of Otago, New Zealand;1. Department of Physical Education and Sports, Seville University, C/ Pirotecnia, s/n, 41013 Seville, Spain;2. International University of La Rioja, Av. Gran Vía Juan Carlos I, 41, 26002 Logroño, Spain;3. Department of Education, Interamerican University of Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico;4. Department of Kinesiology & Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA;5. San Isidoro University Centre, C/ Leonardo Da Vinci, 17, Seville, Spain;1. Centre for Tourism and Leisure Management, School of Management, UniSA Business School, University of South Australia, City West, Adelaide, South Australia 5001, Australia;2. Adnan Kassar School of Business, Lebanese American University, Byblos, Lebanon;1. University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States;2. Miami University, United States;3. University of South Carolina, United States
Abstract:Over the last two decades, the number of studies examining the roles of the core sport product, ancillary services, social interactions among consumers, and relationship marketing programs in the sport context has grown. However, it is also true that these topics have been advanced in many independent research endeavors depending on the touch points (e.g., sport, service, social, and communication encounters) being assessed. To integrate this body of research with sport consumer behavior, the purpose of this conceptual paper, which represents a contribution to the 20th anniversary of Sport Management Review (SMR), is to introduce the construct of consumer experience quality as consisting of four important dimensions – core product, service, social network, and relationship investment quality – into the sport management literature. In order to explain the utility of the proposed construct in the sport context, this article presents an integrative conceptual framework that draws on multiple theories and bodies of literature. A series of propositions are offered to not only understand the role of consumer experience quality in sport consumer decision-making, but also to specify the conditions under which sport consumers are more likely to be satisfied with the core sport product and ancillary services, feel and behave in response to brand-related stimuli, and engage in both transactional and non-transactional behaviors. The paper concludes that future research should be directed at testing the propositions offered in the conceptual framework.
Keywords:Consumer experience  Customer experience  Consumer experience quality  Brand experience  Service quality  Sport consumer behavior
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