The impact of salesperson credibility-building statements on later stages of the sales encounter |
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Authors: | Aaron Arndt Kenneth Evans Timothy D. Landry Sarah Mady Chatdanai Pongpatipat |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Marketing, College of Business and Public Administration, Old Dominion University, 2147 Constant Hall, Norfolk, VA 23529, USA;2. Michael F. Price College of Business, Dean's Office, University of Oklahoma, 307 West Brooks, Norman OK, 73019-4004, USA;3. College of Business Administration, University of Alabama, 371 BAB, Huntsville, AL 35899, USA;4. Department of International Business, Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20016-8044, USA |
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Abstract: | Salespeople frequently attempt to build credibility on their first encounter with a customer. Because customers actively evaluate persuasive messages, it is important to understand their reactions to credibility-building tactics and how these reactions shape the sales interaction. Accordingly, this study investigates customers' reactions to two types of credibility-building statements – benevolence and expertise – using a multistep qualitative analysis of sales transactions in the life insurance industry, along with surveys before and after the sales encounter. Empirical results show that customers are more likely to react positively to credibility-building statements that match their buying style expectations. Furthermore, when customers react positively to a credibility-building tactic, salespeople are more likely to continue using that tactic when addressing customer objections. However, whereas benevolence tactics for addressing customer objections lead to stronger relational outcomes, the findings indicate that expertise tactics do not. Thus, matching sales tactics with customers' buying style expectations is beneficial in the early stages of the sales encounter, but customer objections are best addressed with benevolence tactics, regardless of customers' buying style. |
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Keywords: | salesperson credibility customer objections expertise benevolence |
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