Waiting for service: ten years of empirical research
- 1 May 1999
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in International Journal of Service Industry Management
- Vol. 10 (2) , 171-194
- https://doi.org/10.1108/09564239910264334
Abstract
The problem of waiting is important in service activities, when customers are passive, often standing in a queue. This paper reviews 18 published empirical studies to identify groups of factors and their influence on customers. Some groups of factors reveal significant effects, such as real waiting time or expectation; others such as environmental factors are disappointing. These results alter our vision of the phenomenon, and lead to new directions for further practical or theoretical investigations, for example reintegrating the non-linear effects of time in the study of waiting, exploring the expectation phenomenon and its variations, classifying customers and situations in order to manage critical waiting circumstances better.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Customer stress‐relaxation: the impact of music in a hospital waiting roomInternational Journal of Service Industry Management, 1999
- Impact of waiting attribution and consumer's mood on perceived qualityJournal of Business Research, 1995
- Assimilation processes in service satisfaction formationInternational Journal of Service Industry Management, 1995
- Waiting Time and Decision Making: Is Time like Money?Journal of Consumer Research, 1995
- On WaitingTime & Society, 1995
- Time and Outcome Valuation: Implications for Marketing Decision MakingJournal of Marketing, 1991
- How Long Should a Customer Wait for Service?Decision Sciences, 1991
- Subjective vs. Objective Time Measures: A Note on the Perception of Time in Consumer BehaviorJournal of Consumer Research, 1984
- A Cognitive Model of the Antecedents and Consequences of Satisfaction DecisionsJournal of Marketing Research, 1980
- Time and Consumer Behavior: An Interdisciplinary OverviewJournal of Consumer Research, 1976