Developing mutually beneficial outcomes in service encounters can be challenging due to resource asymmetry within co-created experiences. Such encounters can result in role conflict for service providers. Limited attention has been paid to the effect on service providers of highly collaborative exchanges which require specific customisation. An example of this is ancestral tourism, a dimension of heritage consumption, in which visitors actively participate in the co-creation of experience at museums, archives and related heritage sites. These institutions, previously seen as repositories of historical information, now act as conduits for visitors to investigate their ancestral past. The purpose of this study is to explore the relationship b...
Cultural heritage has become of great importance in a number of areas, including self-identity, comm...
This is the author accepted manuscriptThis paper discusses the impact of co-creation in the context ...
In the UK museums (29%), gardens (38%) and historic buildings (27%) are the most visited attractions...
Developing mutually beneficial outcomes in service encounters can be challenging due to resource asy...
Heritage tourism is increasingly viewed as an individual and experiential phenomenon as well as bein...
Extant services marketing literature suggests that subordinate, boundary spanning, service employees...
This investigation explores challenges in providing integrated and customised services across a hete...
The cultural practice of heritage is naturally and prominently about people. It is undeniably people...
An ancestral legacy is often viewed as the epitome of heritage tourism (McCain, 2003) and can genera...
This conceptual paper aims to contribute to current services marketing, service-dominant logic and c...
Ancestral tourism, or the exploration of one's roots, is an area of special interest which has recen...
Traditional cultural events provide unique opportunities for resident-attendee destination experienc...
A persistent trend in the tourism field is the emergence of different types of niche markets. One ni...
This paper introduces co-creation between management and local stakeholders with the aim of assessin...
© 2013 Dr. Joanna MinkiewiczThis thesis investigates co-creation of the consumption experience in t...
Cultural heritage has become of great importance in a number of areas, including self-identity, comm...
This is the author accepted manuscriptThis paper discusses the impact of co-creation in the context ...
In the UK museums (29%), gardens (38%) and historic buildings (27%) are the most visited attractions...
Developing mutually beneficial outcomes in service encounters can be challenging due to resource asy...
Heritage tourism is increasingly viewed as an individual and experiential phenomenon as well as bein...
Extant services marketing literature suggests that subordinate, boundary spanning, service employees...
This investigation explores challenges in providing integrated and customised services across a hete...
The cultural practice of heritage is naturally and prominently about people. It is undeniably people...
An ancestral legacy is often viewed as the epitome of heritage tourism (McCain, 2003) and can genera...
This conceptual paper aims to contribute to current services marketing, service-dominant logic and c...
Ancestral tourism, or the exploration of one's roots, is an area of special interest which has recen...
Traditional cultural events provide unique opportunities for resident-attendee destination experienc...
A persistent trend in the tourism field is the emergence of different types of niche markets. One ni...
This paper introduces co-creation between management and local stakeholders with the aim of assessin...
© 2013 Dr. Joanna MinkiewiczThis thesis investigates co-creation of the consumption experience in t...
Cultural heritage has become of great importance in a number of areas, including self-identity, comm...
This is the author accepted manuscriptThis paper discusses the impact of co-creation in the context ...
In the UK museums (29%), gardens (38%) and historic buildings (27%) are the most visited attractions...