EFFECT OF RELATIONSHIP MARKETING ON CUSTOMER LOYALTY IN SELECTED TRANSPORT COMPANIES. (A STUDY OF ABC TRANSPORT, THE YOUNG SHALL GROW, PEACE MASS TRANSPORT, AND ABIA LINE)

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ABSTRACT

The purpose of the study was to determine the effect of relationship marketing on customer loyalty in transport companies (ABC Transport, the Young Shall Grow, Peace Mass Transport, and Abia Line) in Abia State Nigeria. The study adopted the descriptive research design.  Using 100 questionnaires distributed to the customers of the transport companies Abia State Nigeria. The study adopted Pearson Moment Correlation was used for analysis. It was found out that there is a significant relationship between trust, commitment, preferential treatment and customer loyalty. It is recommended that there is need for transport companies to train their staff periodically in the variables of relationship marketing. Other variables of relationship marketing should be reviewed and applied in transportation companies.






TABLE OF CONTENTS

Title page                                                                                                            i

Declaration                                                                                                         ii

Certification                                                                                                        iii

Dedication                                                                                                          iv

Acknowledgements                                                                                             v

Table of Contents                                                                                               vi

List of Tables                                                                                                      ix

Abstract                                                                                                               x

 

CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION

1.1          Background To The Study                                                                        1

1.2     Statement of the Problem                                                                          5

1.3     Objective of the Study                                                                              8

1.4      Research Questions                                                                                            8

1.5     Research Hypotheses                                                                                9

1.6     Significance of the Study                                                                          9

1.7     Scope of the Study                                                                                    10

1.8 The Assumption of the Study                                                        10

 

1.9          Limitations of the study                                                                            11

 

 

CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW

2.1     Development in Relationship Marketing Research                                    12

2.1.1  The Definition, Domain And Dimension Of Relationship Marketing    15

2.2     The Ways Transport Companies Retain Their Customers in Abia State    22

2.2.2  Customer Portfolio Analysis                                                                     22

2.2.2  Customer Retaining Marketing Mix                                                          24

2.2.3  Specialized Distribution                                                                           27

2.2.4  Post Patronage Commitment                                                                     28

2.2.5  Reorganization for Customer Retention                                                    29

2.3     Impact of RM and Perceived SQ on Customer Loyalty                           30

2.4.     Empirical Study                                                                                        32

2.4     RM and RM Tactics                                                                                 37

2.4.1  Tangible Rewards                                                                                     38

2.4.2  Interpersonal Communication                                                                   38

2.4.3  Preferential Treatment                                                                              39

2.4.4  Membership                                                                                             39

2.4.5  Direct Mail                                                                                               39

2.5     Theoretical Framework                                                                             40

 

CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

3.1        Research Design                                                                                       45

3.2     Population of the Study                                                                             45

3.3     Sample Size Determination/Sampling Techniques                                    45

3.4       Research Instruments (questionnaire)                                                46

3.5      Psychometric Properties of the Research Instrument                          46

3.5.1   Validity of the Research Instruments                                                       46

3.5.2 Reliability of Research Instruments.                                                        47

3.6     Administration of Instruments                                                                  47

3.8          Sources of Data Collection                                                             47

3.9      Method of Data Analysis                                                                          48

3.10    Method For Test Of Hypotheses                                                               48

3.11    Study Area                                                                                                49

 

CHAPTER FOUR

4.0     PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS OF DATA                                   50

4.1     Distribution of Questionnaire and Rate of Returns                                    50

 

CHAPTER FIVE

5.0     SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION            58

5.1     Summary of Findings                                                                               58

5.2     Conclusion                                                                                                58

5.3     Recommendation                                                                                      58

References

 

 

  

 

 

LIST OF TABLES


Table 4.1.1: Distribution and Retrieval of Questionnaire                                    50

Table 4.2:    Respondents of the Socio-Economic Characteristics                                 51

Table 4.3:    Respondent Opinion on the Key Research Questions                               52

 

 

 

  


 

CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION


           1.1          Background To The Study

Relationship marketing, according to Gordon (1998) is not a wholly independent philosophy but draws on traditional marketing principles. This view suggests that the basic focus upon customer needs still applies but that it is the way upon customer practiced that requires changing fundamentally Christopher et al (1996). If RM is indeed a descendant of traditional marketing then a good starting point in developing a definition of relationship marketing would be to look at how marketing has traditionally been perceived. This traditional view might be summed up succinctly using the Chartered Institute of Marketing’s (CIM, 1963) definition of marketing as: The management process of identifying anticipating and satisfying customer requirements profitably.

This definition includes a number of assumptions that are important in the discussion of relational strategy development. ‘Process’ assumes that traditional marketing is a series of activities carried out as part (only) of a company’s other functions. It implies a functional marketing department responsible for a fixed number of responsibilities presumably closely associated with the ‘marketing mix’. It also implicitly suggests that ‘identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer requirements’ is the singular responsibility of the marketing department. ‘Profitably’ is assumed to mean that these responsibilities are carried out in a competitively superior manner Gordon (1998), although there is no indication of the scale over which this profitability should be measured.

This description of traditional marketing and others of a similar nature emphasis, above all, the functional and process nature of traditional marketing and make no explicit recognition of the long-term value of the customer Buttle (1996). The focus of traditional or mass marketing also implies that whatever status of the customer (non-customers, current customers and past customers) they are all treated in the same way and are of comparable worth status to the organization.

Berry (1983) was among the first to introduce the term ‘relationship marketing’ as a modern concept in marketing. He suggested that this ‘new approach should be defined as:Attracting, maintaining and enhancing customer relationships. While recognizing that customer acquisition was, and would remain, part of a marketer’s responsibilities. This viewpoint emphasized that a ‘relationship view of marketing’ implied that retention and development were of equal (or perhaps even greater) importance to the company in the longer term than customer acquisition. It further implied, by differentiating between customer types, that not all customer or potential customers should be treated in the same way.

Relationship marketing (RM) has been a topic of serious discussion among academics and marketing practitioners for the best part of 20 years. It was, however, during the last decade of the 20th century that relational strategies gained a wider following, and that debate on relationship marketing began to dominate the marketing agenda. During this period relationship marketing was probably the major trend in marketing and certainly the major (and arguably the most controversial) talking point in business management. Relationship marketing in the 1990s became the leading topic of discussions at academic conferences in Europe, North America, Australia and elsewhere around the globe. Relationship marketing was frequently the subject of dedicated practitioner conferences, academic journal articles, as a general topic, in relationship marketing editions of major publications as well as in at least one dedicated Relationship Marketing Journal, (the International Journal of Consumer Relationship Management), and specialist marketing magazines. Relationship marketing was the basis of academic and practitioner texts by major marketing writes e.g. McKenna, (1991); Christopher et al, (1991); Payne et al, (1995), and such was RM’s perceived importance that all, marketing books will include at least one section dedicated to the concept.

RM’s rise to prominence was rapid. As the last decade of the 20th century passed into history, the number of devotees to the concept continued to grow fast. Indeed, RM had according to one prominent marketing writer became an important reference point in marketing and management academics, then marketing practitioners were just as enthusiastic. Indeed, practitionerinterest became the driving force behind RM’s growth O’Malley and Tynan, (1999), with innumerable case studies reported at conferences, in magazines and in texts supporting and justifying the relational approach.

 

Claims for the benefits of relational strategies were numerous, not least that RM was becoming a unifying force within marketing. Mattson (1997b) suggested that here at least, there was a concept within marketing research that served as the generic context for all marketing transaction, whether products or services, consumer or industrial. Gronroos (1996) believed that RM represented the biggest change in 50 years, in effect ‘taking marketing back to its roots’. Relationship marketing, it was being suggested, was a (or is the) ‘new marketing paradigm’ Kotler, (1992), Gummesson, (1999) and a ‘paradigm shift’ Sheth and Parvatiya, (1983); Gronroos, (1994); Morgan and Hunt, (1994) and was taking place in marketing practice and though. Major companies (e.g. British Airways, Boots, Coca Cola Nigeria, First Bank, Union Bank, Virgin Nigeria Airways, Tescoetc) were confident enough about RM’s capabilities to appoint RM managers and directors whose principal function was to operationalize the concept. At around the same time Safeway became the first UK supermarket chain to set up a dedicated RM team. Relationship marketing was in vogue among contemporary marketing academics and practitioners, not only in service and inter-organizational contexts, from where it had developed, but even in consumer markets, where it had initially been overtly shunned O’Malley and Tynan, (1999).

While most marketers approached the concept with some level of rationality, there were some claims that were almost messianic in nature. Reichheld (1990) suggested that the relational concept represented a ‘shift in business thinking, as fundamental as the shift to c Copernican sun-centered system was for astronomers’. Elsewhere, he suggested that the benefits of loyalty-based marketing represented ‘a kind or miracle of loaves and fishes’. According to Reichheld (1990) relationship marketing was the ‘battle cry’ of the 1990s. The ‘marketing mix’ and other aspects of ‘traditional marketing’ were, it was suggested, dying: ‘Long live Relationship Marketing’.

Businesses and Companies, especially the transport companies in Abia State have for long used Relationship marketing Strategy to attract and retain customers. It is not an entirely new concept, but a refocusing of the traditional marketing concept, with the emphasis now on customer value. The attempt to provide answers to the Role of Relationship Marketing Concept and Strategies as a competitive tool by transport companies has led to this study. The focus of this study therefore shall be to analyze the Role of Relationship Marketing Strategies and Concepts, as a competitive strategy to the growth of transport companies in Abia State. The study will also examine the various RM strategies and theories, the procedures to handle customer complaints, and what the transport companies must do to attract, maintain, retain and enhance customers’ relationships which will in effect lead to profitability.


1.2     Statement of the Problem

There is that tendency that when new ideas in management emerge, a lot of people tend to embrace them keenly for a while and to see them as the ultimate solution to whatever problem that we perceive to exist (Payne et al, 1998). Equally there is a tendency to put them aside after the initial novelty has worn off, and they are found to be not quite the panacea that are once thought. Marketing has been proved to this “flavor of the mouth” syndrome. The experience curve, the Boston Matix, all useful tools in themselves are recent examples of ideas that achieved widespread coverage and brief acclaim, only to be quietly drooped by many of their advocates shortly afterwards. Already there are people who would claim that “relationship marketing” is another of these short-life cycled management phenomena. Indeed there is always a danger that when something is presented as new and different, it will be oversold and thus be rejected when it fails to deliver everything that was promised. Relationship marketing as it presented is not in itself a new concept; rather it s refocusing of traditionally marketing with a greater emphasis being placed upon the creation of customer value. Customer value is the summation of all the positive effects that a supplier has upon the customer’s business or in the case of end users, their personal satisfaction.

Creating or enhancing customer value clearly requires a detailed understanding of the customer’s value chain and in particular whereabouts in that chain, the opportunities for value enhancement lies.

The fundamental principle upon which relationship marketing is founded is that greater the level of customer satisfaction with the relationship, not just the products or services, then greater the likelihood that the customer will stay with us.

The importance of retaining customers is that there is strong evidence that customer retention and profitability are directly related. It seems that the longer the customer stays with a seller/producer, the higher the likelihood that they will place a greater amount of business with them, even to the extent of single sourcing. Further, there is likelihood that these retained customers will cost less to service and that they will be less likely to be motivated by price.

Over the years in Nigeria, few companies in particular the transport companies have practiced RM concept, strategy and practice. Especially among the transport companies in Abia State, it has been a fairly old practice, although used ignorantly and crudely. In some of the companies it was not used at all or is inappropriately used. Inspite of the apparent usefulness of marketing and relationship marketing in particular, the transport companies in Abia State are yet to properly accept, adopt and use it. RM has not been fully integrated into the normal marketing and Business strategy of the transport companies. Transport companies are yet to fully understand the usefulness of customer retention as compared to customer acquisition. RM has not been appropriately used by transport companies. Transport companies devote much time to customer acquisition, only to lose such customers to competitors and competing products in a short period of time. Customer acquisition by companies and their managers was akin to looking for a needle in the haystack, finding it and then throwing it back, only to look for it once again. It is not worth the time and money to get customers if one cannot keep them.

The study therefore will address the main impact of Relationship Marketing as a strategy and concept to be used by the transport companies, and discover why most of the companies are yet to accord it a proper place in the life of a business. It will identify the modern strategies involved, how to treat customer complaints, how to attract, enhance, maintain, adopt and retain customers, for the purpose of customers satisfaction, loyalty and profitability.


1.3     Objective of the Study

As implied from the statement of research problems, this study has the following objectives. The main objective is to provide the basis for the understanding of the relationship marketing concept and strategies as used by the transport companies in Abia State.

The specific objectives are to:

i.      To examine the extent of adoption of the relationship marketing concept and strategies.

ii.    To ascertain if there is a significant relationship between trust and customer loyalty.

iii.  To ascertain if there is a significant relationship between commitment and customer loyalty

iv.  To ascertain if there is a significant relationship between preferential treatment and customer loyalty


1.4     Research Questions

This study aims to provide answers to the following questions:

i.      Do transport companies accept, use and adopt the relationship marketing concept and strategies?

ii.    Is there any significant relationship between trust and customer loyalty?

iii.  Is there any significant relationship between commitment and customer loyalty?

iv.  Is there any significant relationship between preferential treatment and customer loyalty?


1.5     Research Hypotheses

This research shall attempt to test and find solutions to the following formulated hypotheses. They are:

Ho: That transport companies do not accept, use and adopt the relationship marketing concept and strategies.

Ho: There is no significant relationship between trust and loyalty.

Ho: There is no significant relationship between commitment and customer loyalty.

Ho: There is no significant relationship between preferential treatment and customer loyalty.


1.6     Significance of the Study

This study on completion will help transport sector to be efficient at all times by improving on the customer relationship so as to satisfy their teeming customers and contribute to the growth of economy and national development.

The study will help to explain and expansiate the concept and operations of relationship marketing as a strategy used to retain customers and attract their patronage and loyalty on a long time bases, which will lead to great market shear expansion.

Future researchers will heave a sigh of relief as the study will serve as a base point and or reference for their great future research endeavours thereby helping them to come out with very improved and reliable findings.


1.7     Scope of the Study

The boundaries of the area covered by this study are determined by its time dimension, the type and nature of the industry and the number and spread of the transport companies. The study is concerned with transport companies in Abia State of Nigeria. The period of 15years (1999 - 2014) is considered long enough to enable us have the within the population of our study, those that are old enough and well established, and transport companies of various sizes with diverse relationship marketing practices and performance profiles. Specifically the study focuses on the adoption of effective, efficient and reliable relationship marketing strategy that will unite the transport companies and their teeming customers.


1.10                 The Assumption of the Study

In the course of this study, the researcher assumed that the transport companies do not adopt nor use an efficient relationship marketing.

 

1.11       Limitations of the study

The study was constrained to its scope as a result of the following reasons:

1.    Abia state was chosen as a study area to represent the entire nation. The researcher believes that the findings shall be used to study the country at large.

2.    That ABC transport, The Young Shall Grow, Peace Mass transport and Abia Line where use as a case hoping that they will serve the purpose.

3.    That information on relationship marketing is not easy to come by as a result of the new concept.

 

 

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