Customer Retention Strategies in Emerging Market E - Commerce
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63468/jpsa.3.3.72Keywords:
customer retention, e‑commerce, emerging markets, loyalty, customer experience, trust, last‑mile logistics, mobile walletsAbstract
Customer retention has become a strategic imperative for e‑commerce firms competing in emerging markets characterized by accelerated digital adoption, infrastructural constraints, and heightened price sensitivity. While acquisition is visible and often rewarded, sustainable profitability derives disproportionately from retaining customers who repurchase, engage, and advocate. This paper synthesizes multidisciplinary literature—relationship marketing, service quality, customer experience management, and technology adoption—to explain why retention in emerging markets is uniquely challenging and how firms can overcome the frictions of trust deficits, delivery uncertainty, and heterogeneous consumer needs. We present an integrative framework that aligns six pillars of retention—trust building, value and pricing discipline, personalized engagement, logistics and service reliability, loyalty and community, and financial inclusion/technology enablement. Drawing on case vignettes from South Asia, Africa, and Latin America, we illustrate how platforms such as Daraz, Jumia, Mercado Libre, and Flipkart localize global playbooks to fit institutional realities (e.g., cash‑on‑delivery, agent networks, mobile wallets, and festival‑based campaigns). The paper concludes with managerial implications, a research agenda highlighting measurement, inclusivity, and ethics, and policy recommendations for enabling secure payments and last‑mile infrastructure in emerging economies.
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Copyright (c) 2025 Wang Dongyan, Christin Agustina Purba

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.



