Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economy

Loyalty programmes are not a neglected research topic. Much of this research is in the context of developed economies and within the product/service domains of marketing, and has not included loyalty programmes for fuel purchases. The purpose of this study was to determine the factors that contribut...

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Main Authors: Marius Wait, Nonsikelelo Lekhuleni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Cogent Business & Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2020.1793522
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spelling doaj-a720143b8a8147bf84e18dd9b795027a2021-06-02T09:21:02ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Business & Management2331-19752020-01-017110.1080/23311975.2020.17935221793522Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economyMarius Wait0Nonsikelelo Lekhuleni1University of JohannesburgUniversity of JohannesburgLoyalty programmes are not a neglected research topic. Much of this research is in the context of developed economies and within the product/service domains of marketing, and has not included loyalty programmes for fuel purchases. The purpose of this study was to determine the factors that contribute to effective loyalty programmes at fuel retailers in an emerging economy and tested an established model within this context and used literature grounding within Relationship Marketing Theory. This study used a qualitative approach and conducted nine in-depth interviews. The analyses were done using inductive content analysis. It explored areas such as the customer’s view on the structure of the loyalty programme and rewards, and the customer’s role in its design. Many new findings emerged, such as the participants’ indifference to tier progression. The main findings indicate that theories/models developed in advanced economies do not necessarily work in emerging economies and this resulted in the construction of a new model. This study contributed to new academic knowledge within the South African context, as well as in the way that fuel loyalty programmes operate at a fundamental level and the management thereof.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2020.1793522fuel loyalty programmesemerging economyrelationship marketing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marius Wait
Nonsikelelo Lekhuleni
spellingShingle Marius Wait
Nonsikelelo Lekhuleni
Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economy
Cogent Business & Management
fuel loyalty programmes
emerging economy
relationship marketing
author_facet Marius Wait
Nonsikelelo Lekhuleni
author_sort Marius Wait
title Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economy
title_short Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economy
title_full Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economy
title_fullStr Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economy
title_full_unstemmed Exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in South Africa, an emerging economy
title_sort exploring factors that determine effective fuel loyalty programmes in south africa, an emerging economy
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Business & Management
issn 2331-1975
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Loyalty programmes are not a neglected research topic. Much of this research is in the context of developed economies and within the product/service domains of marketing, and has not included loyalty programmes for fuel purchases. The purpose of this study was to determine the factors that contribute to effective loyalty programmes at fuel retailers in an emerging economy and tested an established model within this context and used literature grounding within Relationship Marketing Theory. This study used a qualitative approach and conducted nine in-depth interviews. The analyses were done using inductive content analysis. It explored areas such as the customer’s view on the structure of the loyalty programme and rewards, and the customer’s role in its design. Many new findings emerged, such as the participants’ indifference to tier progression. The main findings indicate that theories/models developed in advanced economies do not necessarily work in emerging economies and this resulted in the construction of a new model. This study contributed to new academic knowledge within the South African context, as well as in the way that fuel loyalty programmes operate at a fundamental level and the management thereof.
topic fuel loyalty programmes
emerging economy
relationship marketing
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2020.1793522
work_keys_str_mv AT mariuswait exploringfactorsthatdetermineeffectivefuelloyaltyprogrammesinsouthafricaanemergingeconomy
AT nonsikelelolekhuleni exploringfactorsthatdetermineeffectivefuelloyaltyprogrammesinsouthafricaanemergingeconomy
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