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The Future of Work: Understanding the Effectiveness of Collaboration Between Human and Digital Employees in Service

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The Future of Work: Understanding the Effectiveness of Collaboration Between Human and Digital Employees in Service. / Le, Khanh; Sajtos, Laszlo; Kunz, Werner et al.
In: Journal of Service Research, 23.01.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Le K, Sajtos L, Kunz W, Fernandez K. The Future of Work: Understanding the Effectiveness of Collaboration Between Human and Digital Employees in Service. Journal of Service Research. 2024 Jan 23. Epub 2024 Jan 23. doi: 10.1177/10946705241229419

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Bibtex

@article{d6a4a9f1dc6b431a90be6a7deeb208d7,
title = "The Future of Work: Understanding the Effectiveness of Collaboration Between Human and Digital Employees in Service",
abstract = "The use of digital employees (DEs)—chatbots powered by artificial intelligence (AI)—is becoming increasingly common in the service industry. However, it is unclear whether collaborations between the human employee (HE) and DE can influence customer outcomes, and what the mechanisms behind such outcomes are. This research proposes and tests a theoretical model that explains how the communication of HE-DE collaboration in the form of interdependent behavioral cues can influence customer evaluations of the service they received from such a team. Five experimental studies involving a total of 1403 participants demonstrate that making HE-DE collaboration visible to customers during the service encounter can reinforce their perception of HE-DE team cohesiveness and service process fluency, driving satisfaction. The communication of coordination and team goal cues are two strong stimulants that strengthen such impressions. Further, this research also reveals that the HE-DE collaboration (vs. augmentation or substitution) appeals to customers thanks to their perception of a transparent process, which is induced through collaborative cues. This research provides theoretical implications for a transparent collaborative process between HE and DE and practical advice for firms seeking to integrate DE into their organizations{\textquoteright} workflows.",
author = "Khanh Le and Laszlo Sajtos and Werner Kunz and Karen Fernandez",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1177/10946705241229419",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Service Research",
issn = "1094-6705",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Future of Work

T2 - Understanding the Effectiveness of Collaboration Between Human and Digital Employees in Service

AU - Le, Khanh

AU - Sajtos, Laszlo

AU - Kunz, Werner

AU - Fernandez, Karen

PY - 2024/1/23

Y1 - 2024/1/23

N2 - The use of digital employees (DEs)—chatbots powered by artificial intelligence (AI)—is becoming increasingly common in the service industry. However, it is unclear whether collaborations between the human employee (HE) and DE can influence customer outcomes, and what the mechanisms behind such outcomes are. This research proposes and tests a theoretical model that explains how the communication of HE-DE collaboration in the form of interdependent behavioral cues can influence customer evaluations of the service they received from such a team. Five experimental studies involving a total of 1403 participants demonstrate that making HE-DE collaboration visible to customers during the service encounter can reinforce their perception of HE-DE team cohesiveness and service process fluency, driving satisfaction. The communication of coordination and team goal cues are two strong stimulants that strengthen such impressions. Further, this research also reveals that the HE-DE collaboration (vs. augmentation or substitution) appeals to customers thanks to their perception of a transparent process, which is induced through collaborative cues. This research provides theoretical implications for a transparent collaborative process between HE and DE and practical advice for firms seeking to integrate DE into their organizations’ workflows.

AB - The use of digital employees (DEs)—chatbots powered by artificial intelligence (AI)—is becoming increasingly common in the service industry. However, it is unclear whether collaborations between the human employee (HE) and DE can influence customer outcomes, and what the mechanisms behind such outcomes are. This research proposes and tests a theoretical model that explains how the communication of HE-DE collaboration in the form of interdependent behavioral cues can influence customer evaluations of the service they received from such a team. Five experimental studies involving a total of 1403 participants demonstrate that making HE-DE collaboration visible to customers during the service encounter can reinforce their perception of HE-DE team cohesiveness and service process fluency, driving satisfaction. The communication of coordination and team goal cues are two strong stimulants that strengthen such impressions. Further, this research also reveals that the HE-DE collaboration (vs. augmentation or substitution) appeals to customers thanks to their perception of a transparent process, which is induced through collaborative cues. This research provides theoretical implications for a transparent collaborative process between HE and DE and practical advice for firms seeking to integrate DE into their organizations’ workflows.

U2 - 10.1177/10946705241229419

DO - 10.1177/10946705241229419

M3 - Journal article

JO - Journal of Service Research

JF - Journal of Service Research

SN - 1094-6705

ER -