4.4 Article

Technology acceptance before and after COVID-19: no-touch service from hotel robots

Journal

TOURISM REVIEW
Volume 77, Issue 4, Pages 1062-1080

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/TR-06-2021-0276

Keywords

COVID-19; Robots; Hotels; Technology acceptance model (TAM); Artificial intelligence (AI); ????; ???; ??; ??????; ????; COVID-19; Robots; Hoteles; Technology Acceptance Model (TAM); Inteligencia artificial

Funding

  1. Beijing Social Science Foundation [21JCA042]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71673015]
  3. National Committee of the People's Republic of China [2020-GMD-089]

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This study examines the consumer acceptance of robots in hotels before and after COVID-19, focusing on the impact of COVID-19 on the acceptance of robots by hotel guests and whether guests have higher acceptance of hotel robots since the initial COVID-19 outbreak was brought under control in China. The findings suggest that COVID-19 has increased the acceptance of robots by hotel guests. After COVID-19, guests perceive the usefulness, social influence, attitude, and value of robots as more important, while the importance of ease of use and anthropomorphism of robots decreases. The study highlights the need for the hospitality industry to consider the deployment of robots based on the demographic characteristics of guests and emphasizes the changing attitudes and intentions of guests towards robots and the services they provide.
Purpose This study aims to investigate the consumer acceptance of robots in hotels before and after COVID-19, with a specific emphasis on whether COVID-19 had a significant effect on the acceptance of robots by hotel guests and whether guests had higher levels of acceptance of hotel robots since the initial COVID-19 outbreak was brought under control in China. Design/methodology/approach The sample for this research included Chinese hotel guests before and after COVID-19, with 247 responses obtained before its outbreak and a further 601 responses gathered after. Several hypotheses were developed and tested in a pseudo-experimental design. Findings The results showed that COVID-19 increased hotel guest acceptance of robots. After COVID-19, the perceived importance of the usefulness, social influence, attitude and value of robots increased, while the perceived importance of the ease of use and anthropomorphism of robots decreased. As a contactless service, the usefulness of robots was more valued by customers. This led customers to lower their requirements for the ease of use of robots. In addition, people were more concerned about the social influences on robot use. Research limitations/implications Hotel guest attitudes and behavioral intentions toward robots and the services they can provide are changing. However, whether this change is purely ephemeral and motivated by a pragmatic stance triggered by COVID-19 remains to be established. Practical implications The hospitality industry is encouraged to create a new profile of guests in terms of their favorable or unfavorable disposition toward being served by robots. Hotels should consider the deployment of robots according to the demographic characteristics of customers (e.g. according to guest age levels). Originality/value This research demonstrated that major crises affect customer attitudes and behaviors toward new technologies. COVID-19 resulted in guests paying more attention to the advantages of services offered by hotel robots as a means of reducing the probability of contagion.

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