Abstract

Salespeople involved in the marketing of complex services often perform the role of “relationship manager.” It is, in part, the quality of the relationship between the salesperson and the customer that determines the probability of continued interchange between those parties in the future. A relationship quality model is advanced and tested that examines the nature, consequences, and antecedents of relationship quality, as perceived by the customer. The findings suggest that future sales opportunities depend mostly on relationship quality (i.e., trust and satisfaction), whereas the ability to convert those opportunities into sales hinges more on conventional source characteristics of similarity and expertise. Relational selling behaviors such as cooperative intentions, mutual disclosure, and intensive followup contact generally produce a strong buyer-seller bond.

Keywords

Perspective (graphical)BusinessQuality (philosophy)MarketingRelationship marketingSimilarity (geometry)Customer relationship managementInterpersonal communicationInterpersonal relationshipPsychologySocial psychologyMarketing managementComputer science

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Publication Info

Year
1990
Type
article
Volume
54
Issue
3
Pages
68-81
Citations
2082
Access
Closed

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2082
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Lawrence A. Crosby, Kenneth R. Evans, Deborah Cowles (1990). Relationship Quality in Services Selling: An Interpersonal Influence Perspective. Journal of Marketing , 54 (3) , 68-81. https://doi.org/10.1177/002224299005400306

Identifiers

DOI
10.1177/002224299005400306