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      Addicted to cruises? Key drivers of cruise ship loyalty behavior through an e-WOM approach

      , ,
      International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management
      Emerald

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          This paper aims to identify the drivers that explain loyalty behavior in cruise tourism with the aim of achieving a better understanding of repeat cruisers’ intentions to sail on the same ship or on another ship belonging to the same cruise line or cruise corporation.

          Design/methodology/approach

          Based on over 150,000 online reviews about their satisfaction and experience posted by cruisers using so-called electronic Word of Mouth (e-WOM), the authors apply both a graphic and an econometric technique through input-output circular plots and discrete choice models.

          Findings

          The main results show that cruisers’ behavior is influenced by multiple onboard attributes, such as the service crew, entertainment options, type of cabin, some characteristics of the ship (age, capacity) and the cruise line (Premium-Luxury versus mainstream), and, specifically, the quality and variety of the gastronomic experience.

          Practical implications

          The results highlight that repeats cruisers are predominantly linked to a cruise company or a cruise corporation rather than a particular ship. This result provides information on the moderators that can influence the customers’ repetition behavior, which might be useful for planning revenue management and extending knowledge on hospitality loyalty in general and in the cruise industry in particular, specifically under the current uncertainty due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

          Originality/value

          The previous literature has essentially examined revisit intentions in the cruise market from a qualitative approach and the authors have found no study to date that has simultaneously addressed this issue in three dimensions, namely, ship, cruise line and cruise corporation. The research fills this gap by determining the reasons why passengers would repeat a cruise either on the same ship, with the same cruise line or the same cruise corporation based on previous experience.

          Related collections

          Most cited references77

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          Dimensions of Cruisers’ Experiences, Satisfaction, and Intention to Recommend

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            The Roles of Quality, Value, and Satisfaction in Predicting Cruise Passengers’ Behavioral Intentions

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              • Article: not found

              Quantifying global international migration flows.

              Widely available data on the number of people living outside of their country of birth do not adequately capture contemporary intensities and patterns of global migration flows. We present data on bilateral flows between 196 countries from 1990 through 2010 that provide a comprehensive view of international migration flows. Our data suggest a stable intensity of global 5-year migration flows at ~0.6% of world population since 1995. In addition, the results aid the interpretation of trends and patterns of migration flows to and from individual countries by placing them in a regional or global context. We estimate the largest movements to occur between South and West Asia, from Latin to North America, and within Africa.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management
                IJCHM
                Emerald
                0959-6119
                0959-6119
                November 08 2021
                January 03 2022
                November 08 2021
                January 03 2022
                : 34
                : 1
                : 361-381
                Article
                10.1108/IJCHM-05-2021-0642
                5f1a625e-f006-44bf-a38b-9f00d20d1fde
                © 2022

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