What social media sentiment tells us about why customers churn

Autor: James Lappeman, Michaela Franco, Victoria Warner, Lara Sierra-Rubia
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Consumer Marketing. 39:385-403
ISSN: 0736-3761
DOI: 10.1108/jcm-12-2019-3540
Popis: Purpose This study aims to investigate the factors that influence South African customers to potentially switch from one bank to another. Instead of using established models and survey techniques, the research measured social media sentiment to measure threats to switch. Design/methodology/approach The research involved a 12-month analysis of social media sentiment, specifically customer threats to switch banks (churn). These threats were then analysed for co-occurring themes to provide data on the reasons customers were making these threats. The study used over 1.7 million social media posts and focused on all five major South African retail banks (essentially the entire sector). Findings This study concluded that seven factors are most significant in understanding the underlying causes of churn. These are turnaround time, accusations of unethical behaviour, billing or payments, telephonic interactions, branches or stores, fraud or scams and unresponsiveness. Originality/value This study is unique in its measurement of unsolicited social media sentiment as opposed to most churn-related research that uses survey- or customer-data-based methods. In addition, this study observed the sentiment of customers from all major retail banks across 12 months. To date, no studies on retail bank churn theory have provided such an extensive perspective. The findings contribute to Susan Keaveney’s churn theory and provide a new measurement of switching threat through social media sentiment analysis.
Databáze: OpenAIRE