White Paper MOBILE COMMERCE The Future Is Here Find ever ything you need to se ll onlin 10‚ 3d dcart.com ©20 e visiting www.3 cart. All Rights Reserved. Mobile Commerce - White Paper 2 Abstract Mobile commerce was born in 1997 when the first two mobile phone enabled Coca Cola vending machines were installed in Finland. They used SMS text messages to send the payment to the vending machines. In 1997‚ the first mobile phone based banking service was also launched in
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1 Fuad Husein‚ Andreas Gausrab‚ Elie Bensaci - University of Ottawa’s Executive MBA - January 2002 1 Mobile Commerce A Business Model for Success •Thank you for taking time to hear our presentation today •This project is a team effort by Elie Bensaci‚ Fuad Husein and Andreas Gausrab. Elie is a U of O student in the international MBA program. His contribution to the project is integrated into this presentation. Elie resides in Paris France so for obvious geographic reasons he will not be
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1.0 Introduction The term “customer loyalty” is indisputably one of the most widely studied subjects by researchers in the world‚ intensively evolving over the years. According to past reviews‚ loyalty has been defined as a repeat purchase that is a result of a preference‚ attitude or market share. However‚ according to Uncles‚ Dowling and Hammond’s (2003) review of literature‚ there is no universally agreed definition (Jacoby and Chestnut‚ 1978; Dick and Basu‚ 1994; Oliver‚ 1999). Therefore‚
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ABSTRACT Customer and customer loyalty have an increasing importance in today’s competitive world. The companies follow customer share intelligence instead of market share intelligence. The most used method for this is information technology based customer relationship management. In this paper it is examined the factors that affect this loyalty‚ the place of information technology based customer relationship management variables such as club cards‚ calling centers and web sites
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Background and Aims 1.0 Introduction 1 This study explores the impact of relationship marketing on customer loyalty in banking context. In particular‚ it will discuss the significance and influence of the underpinnings of the relationship marketing such as trust‚ commitment‚ conflict handling‚ values and empathy on customers’ loyalty in the banking sector. This chapter contains; (1) Background of The Study‚ (2) Problem Statement‚ (3) Specific Objectives of This Study‚ (4) Research Question
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STUDY ON CUSTOMER LOYALTY ON STAINLESS STEEL WITH REFERENCE TO SALEM STEEL PLANT Customer loyalty can be defines as “customer behavior characterized by a positive buying pattern during an extended period (measured by means of repeat purchase‚ frequency of purchase‚ wallet share or other indicators) and driven by a positive attitude towards the company and its products or services” (Looy‚ Gemmel & Dierdonck‚ 2003). Statement of the problem: To Study on Customer Loyalty no Stainless
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Management Information Systems for the Business age (8th Edition)‚ McGraw Hill Irwin ‚ New York 18th European Conference on Information Systems ( Research Paper) http://is2.lse.ac.uk/asp/aspecis/20100059.pdf Goker-Myrhaug‚ Ayse-Hans (2010) Evaluation of mobile Information Systems Center of Interacctive Systems Research London
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1. Relevant literature The literature pertaining to relationships among customer satisfaction‚ customer loyalty‚ and profitability can be divided into two groups. The first‚ service management literature‚ proposes that customer satisfaction influences customer loyalty‚ which in turn affects profitability. Proponents of this theory include researchers such as Anderson and Fornell (1994); Gummesson (1993); Heskett et al.(1990); Heskett et al. (1994); Reicheld and Sasser (1990); Rust‚ et al. (1995);
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The loyalty business model is a business model used in strategic management in which company resources are employed so as to increase the loyalty of customers and other stakeholders in the expectation that corporate objectives will be met or surpassed. A typical example of this type of model is: quality of product or service leads to customer satisfaction‚ which leads to customer loyalty‚ which leads to profitability. Contents [hide] 1 The service quality model 2 Expanded models 3 Data collection
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1The evolution of Customer Loyalty strategy 4 2.2 Benefits of Loyalty 4 2.2.1 Cost savings……………………………………........................................................4 2.2.2 Referrals……………….…………………………………………………………….4 2.2.3 Complain rather than defect…………………………………………………………4 2.2.4 Channel Migration…………………………………………………………………..4 2.2.5 Greater awareness of brand asset……………………………………………….…...4 2.2.6 Turn left rather than right………………………………………………...………….4 2.3 Customer Loyalty approaches……………………………………………
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