Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1177/1094670520933683
Title: Proactive Handling of Flight Overbooking: How to Reduce Negative eWOM and the Costs of Bumping Customers
Authors: Nazifi, Amin
Gelbrich, Katja
Grégoire, Y.
Koch, Sebastian
El-Manstrly, Dahlia
Wirtz, Jochen 
Keywords: firm profitability
flight overbooking
offloading
proactivity
service recovery
Issue Date: 19-Jun-2020
Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc.
Citation: Nazifi, Amin, Gelbrich, Katja, Grégoire, Y., Koch, Sebastian, El-Manstrly, Dahlia, Wirtz, Jochen (2020-06-19). Proactive Handling of Flight Overbooking: How to Reduce Negative eWOM and the Costs of Bumping Customers. Journal of Service Research 24 (2) : 206-225. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1177/1094670520933683
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: This research examines the extent to which proactivity in handling flight overbooking reduces negative electronic word-of-mouth (NeWOM) and the required costs of compensation, thus increasing firm profitability. It answers recent calls to use a multimethod approach (i.e., we include archival data, qualitative interviews, seven experiments, and a Monte Carlo simulation for a total of 10 studies) and to adapt recovery to specific contexts (i.e., airlines) and heterogeneous customers (i.e., voluntary/involuntary bumping or offloading). The preliminary studies indicate that overbooking and offloading are pervasive and that a proactive approach is both feasible and desirable. The experiments show that, compared to the default reactive approach (informing passengers at the gate), a proactive approach (informing them before they leave for the airport) substantially reduces NeWOM and the sought compensation. Further, a very reactive approach (informing them in the plane) significantly increases NeWOM and the sought compensation, especially when offloading occurs involuntarily. We also unveil the mechanism explaining the effects of proactivity on NeWOM, through the serial mediation of justice and betrayal. Finally, the results of a Monte Carlo simulation show that offering reduced compensation through a proactive approach allows more aggressive overbooking, higher capacity utilization, and increased net revenue of up to 1.3%. © The Author(s) 2020.
Source Title: Journal of Service Research
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/232935
ISSN: 1094-6705
DOI: 10.1177/1094670520933683
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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