Morgeson Forrest V, Sharma Udit, Schultz Xiaoxu Wu, Pansari Anita, Ruvio Ayalla, Hult G Tomas M
Michigan State University, Broad College of Business, East Lansing, MI USA.
J Acad Mark Sci. 2023 May 29:1-23. doi: 10.1007/s11747-023-00947-1.
Do stronger relationships with customers (customer-company relationships [CCR]) help firms better weather economic crises? To answer this question, we examine firm performance during the stock market crashes associated with the two most severe economic crises of the last 15 years-the protracted Great Recession crisis (2008-2009) and the shorter but extreme COVID-19 pandemic crisis (2020). Juxtaposing the predominant expected utility theory perspective with observed deviations in investor behavior during crises, we find that both pre-crash firm-level customer satisfaction and customer loyalty are positively associated with abnormal stock returns and lower idiosyncratic risk during a market crash, while pre-crash firm-level customer complaint rate negatively affects abnormal stock returns and increases idiosyncratic risk. On average, we find that one standard deviation higher CCR is associated with between $0.9 billion and $2.4 billion in market capitalization on an annualized basis. Importantly, we find that these effects are weaker for firms with higher market share during the COVID-19 crash, but not during the Great Recession crash. These results are found to be robust to a variety of alternate model specifications, time periods, sub-samples, accounting for firm strategies during the crises, and endogeneity corrections. When compared to relevant non-crash periods, we also find that such effects are equally strong during the Great Recession crash and even stronger during the COVID-19 pandemic crash. Contributing to both the marketing-finance interface literature and the nascent literature on marketing during economic crises, implications from these findings are provided for researchers, marketing theory, and managers.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11747-023-00947-1.
与客户建立更紧密的关系(客户 - 公司关系[CCR])是否有助于公司更好地抵御经济危机?为了回答这个问题,我们研究了过去15年中两次最严重经济危机相关股市崩盘期间的公司业绩,即旷日持久的大衰退危机(2008 - 2009年)和时间较短但极端的新冠疫情危机(2020年)。将主要的预期效用理论观点与危机期间投资者行为的观察偏差并列比较,我们发现,在市场崩盘期间,崩盘前公司层面的客户满意度和客户忠诚度均与异常股票回报呈正相关,且特质风险较低,而崩盘前公司层面的客户投诉率则对异常股票回报产生负面影响,并增加特质风险。平均而言,我们发现CCR每高出一个标准差,年化市值就会增加9亿美元至24亿美元。重要的是,我们发现这些影响在新冠疫情崩盘期间对市场份额较高的公司较弱,但在大衰退崩盘期间并非如此。这些结果在各种替代模型设定、时间段、子样本、考虑危机期间公司策略以及内生性校正的情况下都是稳健的。与相关的非崩盘时期相比,我们还发现这些影响在大衰退崩盘期间同样强烈,在新冠疫情崩盘期间甚至更强。这些发现为营销 - 金融界面文献以及经济危机期间营销的新兴文献做出了贡献,并为研究人员、营销理论和管理人员提供了启示。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s11747 - 023 - 00947 - 1获取的补充材料。