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Featured researches published by Dhruv Grewal.


Journal of Marketing Research | 1991

Effects of Price, Brand, and Store Information on Buyers' Product Evaluations

William B. Dodds; Kent B. Monroe; Dhruv Grewal

The authors report a study of the effects of price, brand, and store information on buyers’ perceptions of product quality and value, as well as their willingness to buy. Hypotheses are derived fro...


Journal of Marketing | 1998

The effects of price-comparison advertising on buyers' perceptions of acquisition value, transaction value, and behavioral intentions

Dhruv Grewal; Kent B. Monroe; R. Krishnan

Corrosion-resistant, hermetic glassceramic-to-metal seals are made in a single rapid heating step by inserting a glass preform made of 25-35% by weight ZnO, 2.5-10% by weight Al2O3 and 30-60% SiO2 together with optional nucleating and/or fluxing agents, between a metal pin and surrounding metal collar. Heating is rapid in a single step to first fluidize the glass, while avoiding excessive oxidation of the metal pin and the metal collar and to prevent excessive interaction of the glass composition at the glass/collar interface, then to ceram the seal. The resulting seals exhibit good corrosion resistance to potassium hydroxide solutions and are useful in Ni-Cd batteries.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2000

The impact of technology on the quality-value-loyalty chain: A research agenda

A. Parasuraman; Dhruv Grewal

In this article, the authors first propose a simple model summarizing the key drivers of customer loyalty. Then, on the basis of this model and drawing on key insights from the preceding articles in this issue, they outline a set of issues for further research related to the quality-value-loyalty chain. Next, the authors develop a conceptual framework that integrates the quality-value-loyalty chain with the “pyramid model,” which emphasizes the increasing importance of technology-customer, technology-employee, and technology-company linkages in serving customers. Using this integrated framework as a spring-board, they identify a number of avenues for additional inquiry pertaining to the three types of linkages.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 1994

The Influence of Store Environment on Quality Inferences and Store Image

Julie Baker; Dhruv Grewal; A. Parasuraman

The study reported here examines how combinations of specific elements in the retail store environment influence consumers’ inferences about merchandise and service quality and discusses the extent to which these inferences mediate the influence of the store environment on store image. Results show that ambient and social elements in the store environment provide cues that consumers use for their quality inferences. In addition, store environment, merchandise quality, and service quality were posited to be antecedents of store image—with the latter two serving as mediators—rather than components of store image (as they are typically treated in the store image literature). Theoretical and managerial implications of the findings are discussed, and future research directions are proposed.


Journal of Marketing | 2002

Understanding Service Convenience

Leonard L. Berry; Kathleen Seiders; Dhruv Grewal

The subject of service convenience is important in service economies, yet little is known about this topic. The consumer convenience literature—strong in certain respects, underdeveloped in other respects—gives insufficient attention to service convenience. The prevailing pattern is either to treat service convenience generally or to lump services and goods together into an overall convenience construct. The authors seek to stimulate a higher level of research activity and dialogue by proposing a more comprehensive and multidimensional conceptualization of service convenience and a model delineating its antecedents and consequences. The authors build their case by systematically examining the convenience literature, explicating the dimensions and types of service convenience, developing the overall model and related research propositions, and presenting directions for further research.


Journal of Marketing | 2005

Do Satisfied Customers Buy More? Examining Moderating Influences in a Retailing Context

Kathleen Seiders; Glenn B. Voss; Dhruv Grewal; Andrea L. Godfrey

In this research, the authors propose that the relationship between satisfaction and repurchase behavior is moderated by customer, relational, and marketplace characteristics. They further hypothesize that the moderating effects emerge if repurchase is measured as objective behavior but not if it is measured as repurchase intentions. To test for systematic differences in effects, the authors estimate identical models using both longitudinal repurchase measures and survey measures as the dependent variable. The results suggest that the relationship between customer satisfaction and repurchase behavior is contingent on the moderating effects of convenience, competitive intensity, customer involvement, and household income. As the authors predicted, the results are significantly different for self-reported repurchase intentions and objective repurchase behavior. The conceptual framework and empirical findings reinforce the importance of moderating influences and offer new insights that enhance the understanding of what drives repurchase behavior.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 1997

Assessing the predictive validity of two methods of measuring self-image congruence

M. Joseph Sirgy; Dhruv Grewal; Tamara F. Mangleburg; Jae-ok Park; Kye-Sung Chon; C. B. Claiborne; J. S. Johar; Harold W. Berkman

The predictive validity of two measurement methods of self-image congruence—traditional versus new—were compared in six studies involving different consumer populations, products, consumption settings, and dependent variables (brand preference, preference for product form, consumer satisfaction/dissatisfaction, brand attitude, and program choice). The traditional method is based on tapping the subject’s perception of product-user image and the subject’s perception of his/her self-image along a predetermined set of image attributes and adding the self-congruity scores across all image dimensions. Three problems were identified and discussed in relation to the traditional method: (1) the use of discrepancy scores, (2) the possible use of irrelevant images, and (3) the use of the compensatory decision rule. The new method is based on tapping the psychological experience of self-congruity directly and globally. The findings demonstrated the predictive validity of the new method over and beyond the traditional method.


Journal of Marketing | 1998

The Roles of Price, Performance, and Expectations in Determining Satisfaction in Service Exchanges

Glenn B. Voss; A. Parasuraman; Dhruv Grewal

In this article, the authors examine the roles that price, performance, and expectations play in determining satisfaction in a discrete service exchange. The authors maintain that the price fluctua...


Journal of Service Research | 2006

Challenges and Opportunities in Multichannel Customer Management

Scott A. Neslin; Dhruv Grewal; Robert Leghorn; Venkatesh Shankar; Marije L. Teerling; Jacquelyn S. Thomas; Peter C. Verhoef

Multichannel customer management is the design, deployment, coordination, and evaluation of channels through which firms and customers interact, with the goal of enhancing customer value through effective customer acquisition, retention, and development. The authors identify five major challenges practitioners must address to manage the multichannel environment more effectively: (a) data integration, (b) understanding consumer behavior, (c) channel evaluation, (d) allocation of resources across channels, and (e) coordination of channel strategies. The authors also propose a framework that shows the linkages among these challenges and provides a means to conceptualize the field of multichannel customer management. A review of academic research reveals that this field has experienced significant research growth, but the growth has not been distributed evenly across the five major challenges. The authors discuss what has been learned to date and identify emerging generalizations as appropriate. They conclude with a summary of where the research-generated knowledge base stands on several issues pertaining to the five challenges.


Journal of Marketing | 2007

A Comparative Longitudinal Analysis of Theoretical Perspectives of Interorganizational Relationship Performance

Robert W. Palmatier; Rajiv P. Dant; Dhruv Grewal

Four theoretical perspectives currently dominate attempts to understand the drivers of successful interorganizational relationship performance: (1) commitment–trust, (2) dependence, (3) transaction cost economics, and (4) relational norms. Each perspective specifies a different set and distinct causal ordering of focal constructs as the most critical for understanding performance. Using four years of longitudinal data (N = 396), the authors compare the relative efficacy of these four perspectives for driving exchange performance and provide empirical insights into the causal ordering among key interorganizational constructs. The results demonstrate the parallel and equally important roles of commitment–trust and relationship-specific investments as immediate precursors to and key drivers of exchange performance. Building on the insights gleaned from tests of the four frameworks, the authors parsimoniously integrate these perspectives within a single model of interfirm relationship performance consistent with a resource-based view of an exchange. Managers may be able to increase performance by shifting resources from “relationship building” to specific investments targeted toward increasing the efficacy or effectiveness of the relationship itself to improve the relationships ability to create value. Moderation analysis indicates that managers may find it productive to allocate more relationship marketing efforts and investments to exchanges in markets with higher levels of uncertainty.

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Jens Nordfält

Stockholm School of Economics

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Scott Motyka

Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences

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