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    Discrepancies of positive and negative consumption expectations in high risk drinking experiences

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Baird, Michael
    Ouschan, Robyn
    Phau, Ian
    Date
    2011
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Baird, M. and Ouschan, R. and Phau, I. 2011. Discrepancies of positive and negative consumption expectations in high risk drinking experiences. Australasian Marketing Journal. 19: pp. 1-6.
    Source Title
    Australasian Marketing Journal
    ISSN
    14413582
    School
    School of Marketing
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62821
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    To date, customer satisfaction and service quality studies have only focused on disconfirmation of expectations in terms of product/service attributes. This study applies the disconfirmation of expectations paradigm to explain what makes the consumption of sin products (high risk alcohol consumption) a satisfactory or unsatisfactory experience. In doing so, it illustrates that disconfirmation of expectations should focus on consumption outcomes as they motivate customers to consume products and services. Furthermore, both positive and negative outcome expectancies should be included. The alcohol expectancy literature offers operational definitions of positive and negative outcome expectancies. However, alcohol expectancy studies do not use the disconfirmation paradigm to explain high risk drinking behaviours. This is a serious omission as disconfirmation of expectations have been shown to be a better predictor of customer satisfaction and behavioural intentions than customer expectations This study concludes with data gained from a university setting testing the hypotheses proposed, showing distinct differences between positive and negative disconfirmation of outcome expectations.

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