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Friday, January 28, 2011

Study of Customer Stisfaction towards Kotak Life Insurance Project Report

Introduction to the topic
This chapter will outline and overview the research topic and rational of this study, the objectives and the reason for the personal interest of the author for this study and will help readers to understand what is going to follow in this project.
Insurance is a federal subject in India and has a history dating back to 1818. Life and general insurance in India is still a nascent sector with huge potential for various global players with the life insurance premiums accounting to 2.5% of the country's GDP while general insurance premiums to 0.65% of India's GDP.[1]. The Insurance sector in India has gone through a number of phases and changes, particularly in the recent years when the Govt. of India in 1999 opened up the insurance sector by allowing private companies to solicit insurance and also allowing FDI up to 26%.

Definitions and theoretical concept framework
Customer loyalty has been examined by many researchers in the past and many of them have given various definitions around this concept. According to Heskett (2002), customer loyalty has been regarded as the sina qua non of an effective business strategy. Dick and Basu (1994, p.99) give a stronger conceptualization for customer loyalty. They view it as the “strength of the relationship between an individual’s relative attitude towards an entity (brand, Products, store, or vendor) and repeat patronage”.

Customer satisfaction
What is customer satisfaction?

Social psychologists, marketing researchers, and students of consumer behaviour, have extensively studied the concepts of customer satisfaction and dissatisfaction. The increasing importance of quality in both Products and manufacturing industries has also created a proliferation of research, with more than 15,000 academic and trade articles having been published on the topic of customer satisfaction in the past two decades (Peterson and Wilson, 1992). Several conferences have been devoted to the subject and extensive literature reviews have been published (Day, 1977; Hunt, 1977; LaTour and Peat, 1979; Smart, 1982; Ross, et al., 1987, Barsky, 1992: Oh and Parks, 1997) The result of all this research has been the development of nine distinct theories of customer satisfaction. The majority of these theories are based on cognitive psychology, some have received moderate attention, while other theories have been introduced without any empirical research.

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