Engaging Customers In Value Co-Creation Or Co-Destruction Online

Keywords

Co-creation; Co-destruction; Customer engagement; Qualitative research; Services marketing

Abstract

Purpose: This paper aims to develop a theoretical model to understand co-creation/co-destruction of value through customer engagement in online channels. It also investigates the contributing factors. Design/methodology/approach: The qualitative approach uses the critical incidents technique to answer the research questions. The authors identify 350 critical incidents in which customers expressed online customer engagement-induced value co-creation or co-destruction experiences. The factors and resulting propositions are identified through data analysis. Data coding and analysis are facilitated by using MAXQDA 12. Findings: Co-creation through positively valenced engagement behaviors may occur when customers are delighted, feel valued, experience reciprocity, receive organizational incentives, are solicited for feedback, can count on service recovery efforts and interact with helpful, empathetic, polite and responsive employees. Co-destruction through negatively valenced engagement behaviors emerges from rude employee behaviors, indifference, confrontation with company representatives, technological failure, the lack of complaint outlets and customers’ desire for revenge. Practical implications: Selecting and training employees to be helpful, polite, responsive and empathetic toward online visitors can trigger co-creation. Communication between firms and customers should boost customer approval and delight. Organizations can offer incentives, reliable service delivery and a recovery design to stimulate visitor participation. Soliciting feedback requires sound technological support and direct communication links with visitors. Originality/value: This study presents the conditions and framework contributing to the duality of customer engagement-induced co-creation and co-destruction values in online channels from the customer, organizational, employee, service design and technological perspectives. It also addresses how value is co-created or co-destructed through examples.

Publication Date

2-19-2018

Publication Title

Journal of Services Marketing

Volume

32

Issue

1

Number of Pages

57-69

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1108/JSM-01-2017-0027

Socpus ID

85040228146 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85040228146

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