4.4 Article

To serve and protect: a typology of service robots and their role in physically safe services

Journal

JOURNAL OF SERVICE MANAGEMENT
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 197-209

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/JOSM-11-2021-0409

Keywords

Service robots; Frontline service; Safety; Physical safety; Typology; Pandemic; Customer health

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This article provides in-depth attention to the physical safety needs of service customers in the age of service robots. It presents a typology based on the behavior performed by service robots and discusses potential future research agendas.
Purpose Although consumers feel that the move toward service robots in the frontline so far was driven by firms' strive to replace human service agents and realize cost savings accordingly, the COVID-19 pandemic has led customers to appreciate frontline robots' ability to provide services in ways that keep them safe and protected from the virus. Still, research on this topic is scant. This article offers guidance by providing a theoretical backdrop for the safety perspective on service robots, as well as outlining a typology that researchers and practitioners can use to further advance this field. Design/methodology/approach A typology is developed based on a combination of a theory- and practice-driven approach. Departing from the type of behavior performed by the service robot, the typology synthesizes three different service robot roles from past literature and proposes three new safety-related role extensions. These safety-related roles are derived from a search for examples of how service robots are used in practice during the COVID-19 pandemic. Findings The typology's roles are corroborated by discussing relevant robot implementations around the globe. Jointly, the six roles give rise to several ideas that jointly constitute a future research agenda. Originality/value This manuscript is (one of) the first to provide in-depth attention to the phenomenon of service customers' physical safety needs in the age of service robots. In doing so, it discusses and ties together theories and concepts from different fields, such as hierarchy of needs theory, evolutionary human motives theory, perceived risk theory, regulatory focus theory, job demand-resources theory, and theory of artificial intelligence job replacement.

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