B5. Money Doesn’T Buy Happiness, But What About Buying Trust? the Effectiveness of Financial Compensation in Restoring Trust After Double Deviation

Situations in which a financial compensation is effective to rebuild trust after a double deviation have been neglected by marketing literature. We show that financial compensation could be more effective than non-financial tactics (apology, promise) in recovering trust after double deviation when the initial failure causes a financial loss.



Citation:

Valentina Ortiz Ubal, Cristiane Pizzutti, and Katja Gelbrich (2018) ,"B5. Money Doesn’T Buy Happiness, But What About Buying Trust? the Effectiveness of Financial Compensation in Restoring Trust After Double Deviation", in NA - Advances in Consumer Research Volume 46, eds. Andrew Gershoff, Robert Kozinets, and Tiffany White, Duluth, MN : Association for Consumer Research, Pages: 931-931.

Authors

Valentina Ortiz Ubal, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)
Cristiane Pizzutti, UFRGS
Katja Gelbrich, Catholic University Eichstätt-Ingolstadt



Volume

NA - Advances in Consumer Research Volume 46 | 2018



Share Proceeding

Featured papers

See More

Featured

Unexpected-Framing Effect: Impact of Framing a Product Benefit as Unexpected on Product Desire

Monica Wadhwa, INSEAD, Singapore
Christine Kim, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Amitava Chattopadhyay, INSEAD, Singapore
Wenbo Wang, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Read More

Featured

D9. Consumption Closure as a Driver of Positive Word of Mouth

Christina Saenger, Youngstown State University
Veronica Thomas, Towson University

Read More

Featured

H11. Not for Me: Identity Needs and Consumer Interest in Different Types of Co-creation

Lagnajita Chatterjee, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
David Gal, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA

Read More

Engage with Us

Becoming an Association for Consumer Research member is simple. Membership in ACR is relatively inexpensive, but brings significant benefits to its members.