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Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables

One of the main objectives of fitness center managers is to obtain high levels of loyalty from the customers of these fitness centers. Within the existing literature on fitness center management, previous research has analyzed the importance of the management variables themselves to determine the be...

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Autores principales: García-Pascual, Fernando, Prado-Gascó, Vicente, Alguacil, Mario, Valantine, Irena, Calabuig-Moreno, Ferran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7545106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33101123
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.547846
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author García-Pascual, Fernando
Prado-Gascó, Vicente
Alguacil, Mario
Valantine, Irena
Calabuig-Moreno, Ferran
author_facet García-Pascual, Fernando
Prado-Gascó, Vicente
Alguacil, Mario
Valantine, Irena
Calabuig-Moreno, Ferran
author_sort García-Pascual, Fernando
collection PubMed
description One of the main objectives of fitness center managers is to obtain high levels of loyalty from the customers of these fitness centers. Within the existing literature on fitness center management, previous research has analyzed the importance of the management variables themselves to determine the behavioral intentions of their customers, ignoring other psychological and sociodemographic aspects and focusing on linear relationship models. Therefore, this study, which aims to analyze the impact of different management variables along with psychological (emotions and subjective well-being) and demographic variables (age and sex) on the satisfaction, perceived value (PV) and future intentions (FI) of 398 users (216 men, aged 18–75, Mean = 35.89 ± 14.53) of a fitness center, intends to fill this gap. In this study, two different methodologies are used, i.e., hierarchical regressions models (HRM) and qualitative comparative analysis (QCA). The data were obtained by means of a self-administered questionnaire composed of 69 items that collected different previously validated scales. Considering HRM, the different models proposed explain 52% of the satisfaction variance, 57% of perceived value and 59% of future intentions. In general, it seems that the management variables are better predictors than subjective well-being, emotions and age or gender since their inclusion does not greatly improve the model’s predictive capacity. As far as QCA analyses are concerned, it seems that none of the conditions are necessary for high or low levels of satisfaction, perceived value or future intentions. On the other hand, based on sufficiency analyses, there seem to be 8 pathways or combinations of conditions leading to high levels of satisfaction and 13 for low levels, 11 combinations leading to high levels of IF and 10 leading to low levels; however, there are 6 combinations of conditions leading to high levels of PV and 5 leading to low levels. In general, some of the pathways consider only the management variables, although many of them consider the importance not only of the management variables but also of the interactions that these may have with emotional aspects and, to a lesser extent, with age and well-being. When comparing both methodologies, it can be observed that the QCA models are more explanatory than the HRM models and that they take into account aspects that seem unimportant when observing linear models (such as emotions or age). However, both methodologies should be considered complementary and used simultaneously since, by focusing on different aspects, enriched results are obtained. The results obtained will enable managers to make more efficient use of available resources to increase user satisfaction.
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spelling pubmed-75451062020-10-22 Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables García-Pascual, Fernando Prado-Gascó, Vicente Alguacil, Mario Valantine, Irena Calabuig-Moreno, Ferran Front Psychol Psychology One of the main objectives of fitness center managers is to obtain high levels of loyalty from the customers of these fitness centers. Within the existing literature on fitness center management, previous research has analyzed the importance of the management variables themselves to determine the behavioral intentions of their customers, ignoring other psychological and sociodemographic aspects and focusing on linear relationship models. Therefore, this study, which aims to analyze the impact of different management variables along with psychological (emotions and subjective well-being) and demographic variables (age and sex) on the satisfaction, perceived value (PV) and future intentions (FI) of 398 users (216 men, aged 18–75, Mean = 35.89 ± 14.53) of a fitness center, intends to fill this gap. In this study, two different methodologies are used, i.e., hierarchical regressions models (HRM) and qualitative comparative analysis (QCA). The data were obtained by means of a self-administered questionnaire composed of 69 items that collected different previously validated scales. Considering HRM, the different models proposed explain 52% of the satisfaction variance, 57% of perceived value and 59% of future intentions. In general, it seems that the management variables are better predictors than subjective well-being, emotions and age or gender since their inclusion does not greatly improve the model’s predictive capacity. As far as QCA analyses are concerned, it seems that none of the conditions are necessary for high or low levels of satisfaction, perceived value or future intentions. On the other hand, based on sufficiency analyses, there seem to be 8 pathways or combinations of conditions leading to high levels of satisfaction and 13 for low levels, 11 combinations leading to high levels of IF and 10 leading to low levels; however, there are 6 combinations of conditions leading to high levels of PV and 5 leading to low levels. In general, some of the pathways consider only the management variables, although many of them consider the importance not only of the management variables but also of the interactions that these may have with emotional aspects and, to a lesser extent, with age and well-being. When comparing both methodologies, it can be observed that the QCA models are more explanatory than the HRM models and that they take into account aspects that seem unimportant when observing linear models (such as emotions or age). However, both methodologies should be considered complementary and used simultaneously since, by focusing on different aspects, enriched results are obtained. The results obtained will enable managers to make more efficient use of available resources to increase user satisfaction. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7545106/ /pubmed/33101123 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.547846 Text en Copyright © 2020 García-Pascual, Prado-Gascó, Alguacil, Valantine and Calabuig-Moreno. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychology
García-Pascual, Fernando
Prado-Gascó, Vicente
Alguacil, Mario
Valantine, Irena
Calabuig-Moreno, Ferran
Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables
title Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables
title_full Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables
title_fullStr Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables
title_full_unstemmed Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables
title_short Future Intentions of Fitness Center Customers: Effect of Emotions, Perceived Well-Being and Management Variables
title_sort future intentions of fitness center customers: effect of emotions, perceived well-being and management variables
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7545106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33101123
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.547846
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