Finding service quality improvement opportunities across different typologies of public transit customers
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Taylor & Francis
Materia
Light rail transit Market segmentation Quality of service
Fecha
2018Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Jose Luis Machado, Rocío de Oña, Francisco Diez-Mesa and Juan de Oña (2018) Finding service quality improvement opportunities across different typologies of public transit customers. Transportmetrica A Transport Science, 14, 761-783. https://doi.org/10.1080/23249935.2018.1434257
Patrocinador
FEDER of the European Union; Spanish Ministry of the Economy and Competitiveness (TRA2015-66235-R)Resumen
Existing approaches dealing with customer perception data have two fundamental challenges: heterogeneity of customer perceptions and simultaneous interrelationships between attitudes that explain customer behavior. This paper aims to provide practitioners with a methodology to address the twin challengers of service quality evaluation based on public transit user behavioral theory and advanced market segmentation. The original contributions of this paper are: the definition of customer typologies based on advanced customer segmentation with Latent Class Clustering; analysis of the effect of service quality perceptions on behavioral intentions within the behavioral theory framework that considers multiple attitudes simultaneously affecting customer intentions; identification of transit service improvement opportunities aimed at most customers as well as for specific customer typologies. Our research shows practitioners and researchers that specific needs and perceptions of advanced segmentations of customers can be identified and they may be as important as those shared by most customers. We applied our methodology to a light rail transit service in Seville, Spain. We measured the direct effect of LRT service quality on behavioral intentions, customer satisfaction and, in the case of some customers, the available transport alternatives. Other observed attitudes of customers were also indirectly related to behavioral intentions. We found common customer agreement about aspects of LRT service quality for tangible service equipment, accessibility, information, individual space and environmental pollution. Customers clearly showed different opinions relating to safety, customer services and availability.