4.5 Article

Frontline robots in tourism and hospitality: service enhancement or cost reduction?

Journal

ELECTRONIC MARKETS
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 477-492

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s12525-020-00432-5

Keywords

Service robots; Human-likeness; Affinity; Customer attributions; Customer behavioral intentions; Hospitality industry

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This research explores how customers' attributions about the firm motivations to implement service robots are affecting customers' intentions to use and recommend this innovation. The study found that customers' perceptions of the robot's human-likeness and affinity with the robot shape their attributions, which in turn mediate the relationships between affinity towards the robot and customer behavioral intentions.
Robots are being implemented in many frontline services, from waiter robots in restaurants to robotic concierges in hotels. A growing number of firms in hospitality and tourism industries introduce service robots to reduce their operational costs and to provide customers with enhanced services (e.g. greater convenience). In turn, customers may consider that such a disruptive innovation is altering the established conditions of the service-provider relationship. Based on attribution theory, this research explores how customers' attributions about the firm motivations to implement service robots (i.e. cost reduction and service enhancement) are affecting customers' intentions to use and recommend this innovation. Following previous research on robot's acceptance, our research framework analyzes how these attributions may be shaped by customers' perceptions of robot's human-likeness and their affinity with the robot. Structural equation modelling is used to analyze data collected from 517 customers evaluating service robots in the hospitality industry; results show that attributions mediate the relationships between affinity toward the robot and customer behavioral intentions to use and recommend service robots. Specifically, customer's affinity toward the service robot positively affects service improvement attribution, which in turn has a positive influence on customer behavioral intentions. In contrast, affinity negatively affects cost reduction attribution, which in turn has a negative effect on behavioral intentions. Finally, human-likeness has a positive influence on affinity. This research provides practitioners with empirical evidence and guidance about the introduction of service robots and its relational implications in hospitality and tourism industries. Theoretical advances and future research avenues are also discussed.

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