Internet Learning Volume 5, Number 1, Fall 2016/Winter 2017 | Page 21

Internet Learning markable to be registered and remembered for some time, without being abrasive” (Carbone & Haeckel, 1994, para 48). LaTour and Carbone (2014) later noted that with regard to an existing Pizza Hut UK CX study, most participants could not remember a key experience just one week after visiting a restaurant. This current CX academy study also relied on some customer memory but it was not necessary since customers could observe a current website iteration while partaking in a brief survey. Much research exists on web design and relationship theory as well as user experience (UX) and what comprises better navigation and interactions. For example, Tomiuk and Pinsonneault (2009) found that such theories can be helpful in developing websites which can foster greater customer loyalty. Here, a sample of 305 participants was examined for their emotional perceptions (commercial friendships) among a variety of websites across three industries banking, pharmaceuticals, and insurance. They further broke down these websites based on the type of site community other than those that simply were erected for the purpose to show and sell a product, but for those, “... more closely abide by the norms and behaviours evocative of friendships and/or family relations” (Tomiuk & Pinsonneault, 2009, p. 414). The results indicated that a sense of caring and genuineness were hallmarks as well as trust. Such emotional connections are equivalent to those needed to foster successful CX within websites or wherever a company is perceived doing business. Thus businesses can capitalize on a purposefully designed website as a formidable customer experience marketing tool. For this study, however, examination of the extent of use of purposeful customer experience in an academic sample can serve as a benchmark to investigate how the components of the CX theory affect the doctoral chairs’ satisfaction of utilizing the University of Phoenix CLSER website and the University of Phoenix Center itself. Thus, this literature review demonstrates several samples of the breadth and depth of the variety of ways in which there exists disagreement among researchers on how to best measure customer experience let alone an example using academia as a business foundation. The significance can, therefore, be seen as a benchmark CX best practice measurement with the academy as a sample. The components to create purposeful CX interactions start with the theory that constitutes its interactions: understanding customer personas related to the particular product or service, the customer emotional buy in of products or services, and tracking the CX three tier continuum, including (i) customer interactions with company messages about its products or services, (ii) customer to product or service advocate, and (iii) User Experience (UX), directly interacting with the company’s products or services via persona behavior (Van Tyne, 2011). This study provided a benchmark measurement 20