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Hospitality Leadership Through Learning
Faculty & Research

Loyalty: A Strategic Commitment

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Vol 39 No 1
By: John T. Bowen and Stowe Shoemaker

Executive Summary: A study of 892 luxury-hotel guests, most of whom travel frequently and primarily on business, supports the idea that relationship marketing can benefit luxury-hotel marketing. A model of service relationships based on focus groups and customer-loyalty studies is developed. The study primarily tested benefits that hotels could offer guests to foster loyalty. Benefits that garnered strong support were room upgrades, flexible check in and check out, personalized services and expedited registration; being able to request a specific room; and employees who take guests' problems seriously. Trust is also an antecedent of loyalty; hotels can foster trust by ensuring guest safety, providing consistent service, seeing that employees follow through on guest requests, being truthful and communicating accurately.

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