Robots do not judge: service robots can alleviate embarrassment in service encounters
Jana Holthöwer () and
Jenny Doorn ()
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Jana Holthöwer: University of Groningen
Jenny Doorn: University of Groningen
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 2023, vol. 51, issue 4, No 3, 767-784
Abstract:
Abstract Although robots are increasingly used in service provision, research cautions that consumers are reluctant to accept service robots. Five lab, field, and online studies reveal an important boundary condition to earlier work and demonstrate that consumers perceive robots less negatively when human social presence is the source of discomfort. We show that consumers feel less judged by a robot (vs. a human) when having to engage in an embarrassing service encounter, such as when acquiring medication to treat a sexually transmitted disease or being confronted with one’s own mistakes by a frontline employee. As a consequence, consumers prefer being served by a robot instead of a human when having to acquire an embarrassing product, and a robot helps consumers to overcome their reluctance to accept the service provider’s offering when the situation becomes embarrassing. However, robot anthropomorphism moderates the effect as consumers ascribe a higher automated social presence to a highly human-like robot (vs. machine-like robot), making consumers feel more socially judged.
Keywords: Service robots; Social judgment; Embarrassment; Automated social presence; Anthropomorphism (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)
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DOI: 10.1007/s11747-022-00862-x
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