4.4 Article

Service robots, agency and embarrassing service encounters

Journal

JOURNAL OF SERVICE MANAGEMENT
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 389-414

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/JOSM-12-2020-0435

Keywords

Service robots; Artificial intelligence; Agency; Embarrassment; Service encounter

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This study is one of the first to explore a context where service robots are likely to be the preferred service delivery mechanism over human employees. Results show that interactions with service robots attenuated customers' anticipated embarrassment, and service robots are perceived to have less agency than service employees, making them the preferred service delivery mechanism in potentially embarrassing service encounters for some customers.
Purpose Extant research mainly focused on potentially negative customer responses to service robots. In contrast, this study is one of the first to explore a service context where service robots are likely to be the preferred service delivery mechanism over human frontline employees. Specifically, the authors examine how customers respond to service robots in the context of embarrassing service encounters. Design/methodology/approach This study employs a mixed-method approach, whereby an in-depth qualitative study (study 1) is followed by two lab experiments (studies 2 and 3). Findings Results show that interactions with service robots attenuated customers' anticipated embarrassment. Study 1 identifies a number of factors that can reduce embarrassment. These include the perception that service robots have reduced agency (e.g. are not able to make moral or social judgements) and emotions (e.g. are not able to have feelings). Study 2 tests the base model and shows that people feel less embarrassed during a potentially embarrassing encounter when interacting with service robots compared to frontline employees. Finally, Study 3 confirms that perceived agency, but not emotion, fully mediates frontline counterparty (employee vs robot) effects on anticipated embarrassment. Practical implications Service robots can add value by reducing potential customer embarrassment because they are perceived to have less agency than service employees. This makes service robots the preferred service delivery mechanism for at least some customers in potentially embarrassing service encounters (e.g. in certain medical contexts). Originality/value This study is one of the first to examine a context where service robots are the preferred service delivery mechanism over human employees.

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