Abstract The benefits of customer co-creation of value in the service context are well recognized. However, little is known about service failures in a co-creation context and the consequent roles of both firms and customers in the advent of service recovery. In conceptualizing a new construct, “customer participation in service recovery, ” this study proposes a theoretical framework that delineates the consequences of the construct and empirically tests the pro-posed framework using role-playing experiments. The results indicate that, when customers participate in the service recovery process in self-service technology contexts, they are more likely to report higher levels of role clarity, perceived value of future co-creation, satisfactio...
Service failure and recovery have started to draw marketing academic and practitioners\u27 attention...
Treating customers as passive recipients of service recovery does not account for their naturally el...
This study investigates how the effect of the failure of co-created products or services influences:...
Co-creating service recovery with customers has recently appeared as a new perspective in service re...
PurposeService recovery is a challenge to organizations because customers will respond to recovery p...
This study focuses on the underlying mechanism that leads to co-recovery behaviour and favourable co...
Research on customer participation in service recovery is surging, yet empirical examinations provid...
Research on customer participation in service recovery is surging, yet empirical examinations provid...
Co-creating the service recovery experience – A new lens on service recovery [Abstract
Despite that service retailers are continually seeking ways to ensure customer satisfaction service ...
Research on customer participation in service recovery is surging, yet empirical examinations provi...
Purpose Emerging economies are moving towards experience economies. Be it products or services, it i...
While numerous studies have examined the benefits of customer participation (CP), understanding of t...
Despite the importance of co-production in service recovery processes, few studies have examined it ...
Purpose: The service recovery literature provides little guidance to firms on how users of self-serv...
Service failure and recovery have started to draw marketing academic and practitioners\u27 attention...
Treating customers as passive recipients of service recovery does not account for their naturally el...
This study investigates how the effect of the failure of co-created products or services influences:...
Co-creating service recovery with customers has recently appeared as a new perspective in service re...
PurposeService recovery is a challenge to organizations because customers will respond to recovery p...
This study focuses on the underlying mechanism that leads to co-recovery behaviour and favourable co...
Research on customer participation in service recovery is surging, yet empirical examinations provid...
Research on customer participation in service recovery is surging, yet empirical examinations provid...
Co-creating the service recovery experience – A new lens on service recovery [Abstract
Despite that service retailers are continually seeking ways to ensure customer satisfaction service ...
Research on customer participation in service recovery is surging, yet empirical examinations provi...
Purpose Emerging economies are moving towards experience economies. Be it products or services, it i...
While numerous studies have examined the benefits of customer participation (CP), understanding of t...
Despite the importance of co-production in service recovery processes, few studies have examined it ...
Purpose: The service recovery literature provides little guidance to firms on how users of self-serv...
Service failure and recovery have started to draw marketing academic and practitioners\u27 attention...
Treating customers as passive recipients of service recovery does not account for their naturally el...
This study investigates how the effect of the failure of co-created products or services influences:...