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Determinants of Customer Determinants of Customer Value: A Comparative Value: A Comparative Study of Rural and Urban Study of Rural and Urban Customers Customers Dr. Tejinder Sharma Dr. Tejinder Sharma Department of Commerce Department of Commerce Kurukshetra University, Kurukshetra Kurukshetra University, Kurukshetra [email protected] [email protected] & & Dr. Suresh Dhanda Dr. Suresh Dhanda HAFED HAFED
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Page 1: Determinants of Customer Value

Determinants of Customer Determinants of Customer Value: A Comparative Study Value: A Comparative Study

of Rural and Urban of Rural and Urban CustomersCustomers

Determinants of Customer Determinants of Customer Value: A Comparative Study Value: A Comparative Study

of Rural and Urban of Rural and Urban CustomersCustomers

Dr. Tejinder SharmaDr. Tejinder SharmaDepartment of CommerceDepartment of Commerce

Kurukshetra University, KurukshetraKurukshetra University, [email protected]@gmail.com

& &

Dr. Suresh DhandaDr. Suresh DhandaHAFEDHAFED

Page 2: Determinants of Customer Value

Conceptualizing Customer Value

• Exchange worth (Hicks, 1959)• Perceived worth in monetary terms of a set of

economuc, technical,s ervice and social benefits received by a customer (Anderson, 1993).

• Overall revenue to a firm (Dess and Miller, 1993)• Outcome of value gained through benefits and

value lost due to each cost (Bijapurkar, 1997)• Market perceived quality, relative to price (Gale,

1995)• Set of attributes (Chakraborty, 2000)

Page 3: Determinants of Customer Value

Conceptualizing Customer Value

• Overall assessment of utility of a product based on perception of what is received and what is given (Zeithaml, 1988)

Page 4: Determinants of Customer Value

Synthesized view of customer value

• Value is inherent to the use of a product

• It is customer perceived and not seller defined

• It is multidimensional• Process of balancing give and get

components

Page 5: Determinants of Customer Value

Research model of Customer Value

• (Kotler, 2000)

Customer Delivered Value

Total Customer Value

Total Customer Cost

Product Value

Service Value

Personnel Value

Image Value

Monetary Cost

Time Cost

Energy Cost

Psychic Cost

Page 6: Determinants of Customer Value

Objective of study To compare the customer

perceptions of value of the rural and urban customers

Page 7: Determinants of Customer Value

Methodology• Identifying the reference product• Developing questionnaire• Data collection and analysis

Page 8: Determinants of Customer Value

Identifying reference product

• Used reference product method over other methods (internal engineering assessment, field value in use were too technical, group value assessment, compositional approach, conjoint analysis entailed respondents’ limitations)

• Pilot survey on 60 customers (30 rural, 30 urban)

• Product rating of 20 selected consumer durables on the acquisition effort

• TV emerged as common product on weighted average of preference

Page 9: Determinants of Customer Value

Developing questionnaire

• Multiple components of each component of value were drafted on the basis of literature and expert opinion

• 105 item statements drafted (product value – 12, service value – 20, personnel value – 14, image value – 22, monetary cosr 15, time & energy cost – 10, psychic cost – 12)

• 5-point likert scale• Pilot survey on 50 respondents (25 rural/urban each)• 29 statements deleted, 8 added, 19 modified for

language• Reliability check (Cronbach alpha – 0.6754)

Page 10: Determinants of Customer Value

Data Collection• 320 respondents (160 rural; 160

urban)• 100 males and 60 females from

rural and urban segments• Represented north and south

Haryana

Page 11: Determinants of Customer Value

Data analysis• Exploratory analysis• Factor analysis on each

component of value an cost, done separately on the rural and urban customers

Page 12: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of product value

• Product performance and safety emerged as the most important determinant of customer value for both customer segments.

• Rural customers associate performance with technology, while urban customers associate it with the latest features

• Urban customers lay more stress on quality cerifications (ISO, etc.) than rural counterparts

• Elegance of looks is important factor

Page 13: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of product value

• Assortment is viewed positively by urban customers, but negatively by the rural customers.

• Durability (longivity of use) covaries with quality and innovation

Page 14: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of Service Value

• Rural customers lay more stress on human and pre-purchase service elements, urban customers consider transactional elements (installation, warranty, salesmen behaviour) as more important

• Information availability is more important for rural customers, while urban customers value service support, promptness, consistency, etc.

Page 15: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of Personnel Value

• Rural customers want high expression of self among the society by way of involvement, product customisation and are influenced by the country image, reputation of a firm. They tend to get carried away by courteous behaviour of salespersons.

• Urban counterparts want manufacturer’s attention over image and reputation. They rationalize the intangible offerings.

Page 16: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of Image Value

• Rural customers give high importance to brand over the urban counterparts.

• Rural customers exhibit group behaviour and peer endorsement, dealer’s endorsement are more important. They value familiarity, trust, reliability and ignore exclusivity, quality certification)

• Urban customers do consider independent testimony more than peer/family testimony, but want exclusivity and differentiation.

Page 17: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of monetary cost

• Both segments exhibit almost similar behaviour with respect to monetary cost

• Both have high propensity towards discounts and finance schemes.

• Cost of usage and convenience of payment is more important for rural customers than their urban counterparts.

Page 18: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of time & energy cost

• Effort is more important for rural customers while time is more important for the urban customers (in line with the cultural traits of the two segments)

• Rural customers do not see websites or online media

Page 19: Determinants of Customer Value

Perceptions of psychic cost

• Risk aversive-ness and cost saving are more important determinants of psychic cost for rural customers.

• Information search is an important coping up mechanism for psychic cost for rural customers.

• Urban customers prefer involvement in product design as a coping up mechanism for reducing the psychic cost

Page 20: Determinants of Customer Value

Conclusions• Despite higher convergence, rural and urban

customers have certain differences.• Human/emotional aspect and group behaviour

are more important for rural customers while the rationality of value offering is more important for the urban customers.

• Among the intangible cues, rural customers are more sensitive to self esteem, peer endorsement, while the urban customers look for exclusivity and differentiation.

Page 21: Determinants of Customer Value

Further research• Refining/standardizing the scale for

measuring multi-product, multi-attribute determinants of customer value

• Changing dynamics of rural society• New product penetration in rural

markets