Introducing a sensemaking perspective to the service experience
Purpose: Most recent service experience research considers customers as sensemakers and sensemaking as a focal process in experience construction. Despite this, the sensemaking theory engendered in organization studies has not been applied in the quest for an in-depth understanding of the service experience. This study introduces a sensemaking perspective to the service experience and develops a conceptualization of how customers construct their experiences cognitively through sensemaking. Design/methodology/approach: The service experience literature is dominated by a focus on firms implementing service experiences for customers. This study, in contrast, investigates service experience and its formation from the customers' viewpoint: how service experiences are formed as a part of customers' everyday life and sensemaking processes instead of under service providers' control. Findings: Service experience is characterized as a mental picture – a collage of meanings created by a customer through the sensemaking processes. A sensemaking framework that characterizes service experience formation and its four seminal dimensions, including the self-related, sociomaterial, retrospective and prospective sensemaking, is introduced. Originality/value: This article contributes to the service literature by introducing a new theoretical lens through which the service experience concept can be investigated and reframed.
| Year of publication: |
2021
|
|---|---|
| Authors: | Kemppainen, Tiina ; Uusitalo, Outi |
| Published in: |
Journal of Service Theory and Practice. - Emerald, ISSN 2055-6225, ZDB-ID 2807318-6. - Vol. 32.2021, 2 (03.12.), p. 283-301
|
| Publisher: |
Emerald |
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