How consumers react differently toward humanoid vs. nonhumanoid robots after service failures: a moderated chain mediation model
Purpose With the increasing use of robots in service scenarios in hospitality industries, service failure frequently occurs during the service process, and consumers may react differently toward humanoid vs. nonhumanoid robots due to different performance expectancies. This study focuses on consumers' reactions to service failures by humanoid vs. nonhumanoid robots and the different impacts on brand forgiveness and revisit intentions through performance expectancy for different genders. Design/methodology/approach The study used a sample of 280 participants to test the moderated chain mediation model. The participants were instructed to report their performance expectancies for humanoid/nonhumanoid robots and imagine a hotel check-in scenario in which a service failure occurs. Brand forgiveness, brand revisit intention and other demographic information were assessed. Findings The results show that consumers have higher performance expectancy for nonhumanoid robots. This performance expectancy generates brand forgiveness and revisit intentions for male consumers but does not affect female consumers' forgiveness and revisit behaviors. Originality/value This study contributes to the literature by taking a long-term perspective to investigate the outcomes after service failure, providing evidence for pending questions in previous studies and enriching studies of gender differences. Additionally, this study provides practical implications to consider the use of anthropomorphism in robots, advocate for functional confidence in robots and target consumers across genders.
Year of publication: |
2023
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Authors: | Zhang, Mengwei ; Cui, Jinsheng ; Zhong, Jianan |
Published in: |
International Journal of Emerging Markets. - Emerald Publishing Limited, ISSN 1746-8817, ZDB-ID 2242085-X. - Vol. 19.2023, 11, p. 4306-4326
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Publisher: |
Emerald Publishing Limited |
Subject: | Service robot | Service failure | Brand forgiveness | Performance expectancy | Gender difference |
Saved in:
Online Resource