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DOI: 10.1108/08876040410548276
OpenAccess: Closed
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Jaycustomer behavior: an exploration of types and motives in the hospitality industry

Lloyd C. Harris,Kate Reynolds

Typology
Hospitality
Empirical research
2004
Christopher Lovelock originated the term “jaycustomer” behavior to refer to customers who deliberately act in a thoughtless or abusive manner, causing problems for the firm, employees, or other customers. An overview of existing literature reveals the focal concentration of empirical research regarding the listing or categorization of jaycustomer behaviors has been on individual forms. While the need for a development of a typology of general or all‐embracing jaycustomer behaviors has been recognized, and forwarded by a small number of researchers, such efforts have been anecdotal or conceptual in nature, or have emerged as part of wider research. The aim of this study is to advance understanding of the different forms of jaycustomer behaviors through providing empirical insights that explore and describe the activities and motivations of such “deviant” or “dysfunctional” customer behaviors through garnering empirical insights from both customer‐contact employees and customers themselves. After a review of existing literatures and a discussion of the research design and approach adopted, the findings from over 100 in‐depth interviews, utilizing critical incident technique, are presented and the implications of the study discussed.
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    Jaycustomer behavior: an exploration of types and motives in the hospitality industry” is a paper by Lloyd C. Harris Kate Reynolds published in 2004. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.