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Ghosts in the Machine: How Marketing and Human Capital Investments Enhance Customer Growth When Innovative Services Leverage Self-Service Technologies

Terence J. V. Saldanha (), Abhishek Kathuria (), Jiban Khuntia () and Benn R. Konsynski ()
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Terence J. V. Saldanha: Terry College of Business, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602
Abhishek Kathuria: Indian School of Business, Hyderabad 500111, Telangana, India
Jiban Khuntia: Business School, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, Colorado 80202
Benn R. Konsynski: Goizueta Business School, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322

Information Systems Research, 2022, vol. 33, issue 1, 76-109

Abstract: Rapid improvements in underlying technologies coupled with the diminution of contact-based interactions are resulting in commensurate increases in the supply of and demand for innovative electronic services over self-service technologies (SSTs). This situation raises critical questions regarding value creation as prior research suggests mixed effects of SSTs on customers and unclear implications of SSTs for firm customer growth. These implications are accentuated when firms offer innovative electronic services because of customers’ unfamiliarity with the services. In turn, this dynamic raises vital questions about (a) how SSTs influence firm customer growth, particularly when the firm’s electronic services are more innovative, and (b) what complementary investments help firms achieve customer growth from SSTs and innovative electronic services. In this study, we conceptualize the theoretical mechanisms underlying these relationships and empirically examine seven-year longitudinal secondary data of over 3,800 credit unions in the United States to obtain three main findings. First, consistent with prior views of SSTs, we find no significant unconditional effect of SSTs on firm customer growth. Second, we find that the innovativeness of the firm’s electronic services (IES) negatively moderates the influence of SSTs on firm customer growth, suggesting that SSTs may positively influence growth when IES is low but may deter growth when IES is high. Third, marketing intensity and human capital intensity positively moderate the influence of IES on the effect of SSTs on customer growth. In supplementary analysis, we find similar results using cross-sectional primary data from a sample of 186 U.S. credit unions and their customers matched with secondary data. Our unique theoretical contribution lies in highlighting that innovative electronic services on SSTs aimed at bringing the enterprise to the customer may not be enough for firms to achieve customer growth unless those services are accompanied by complementary investments in marketing and human capital.

Keywords: self-service technologies; IT-enabled services; business value of IT; marketing; human capital; credit unions; innovation; firm performance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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