The hard-working virtual agent in the service encounter boosts customer satisfaction

Magnus Söderlund, Eeva-Liisa Oikarinen, Teck Ming Tan
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

ABSTRACT Virtual agents (VAs) are used increasingly as representatives of the firm in retail and service settings – particularly in online environments. Existing studies indicate that the customer’s experience is enhanced if VAs resemble humans, which seems to imply that what has been learned over the years in research about the influence of the human employee’s behavior on customer satisfaction may be applicable also to VA behavior. This study explores one factor, effort, which has a positive impact on customer satisfaction when it characterizes the human employee in service encounters. Although a VA (i.e., a computer program) cannot experience effort, it was assumed that human sensitivity to other humans’ effort, and a tendency to anthropomorphize non-human agents, would make human customers susceptible to effort-expending signals when they interact with a VA. To examine this assumption, data were collected from customers who had been interacting with existing VAs. The results indicate that three specific behaviors (engaging in personal conversation, listening, and display of warmth) boost the customer’s perceptions of VA effort, and that perceived VA effort has a positive impact on customer satisfaction.
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虚拟座席在服务中努力工作,提高客户满意度
虚拟代理(VAs)越来越多地被用作零售和服务环境中公司的代表,尤其是在在线环境中。现有的研究表明,如果虚拟助理与人类相似,客户的体验会得到增强,这似乎意味着,多年来关于人类员工行为对客户满意度影响的研究成果可能也适用于虚拟助理行为。本研究探讨了一个因素,努力,这对客户满意度有积极的影响,当它表征服务遭遇的人类员工。虽然虚拟助理(即计算机程序)无法体验到努力,但假设人类对其他人的努力的敏感性,以及将非人类代理拟人化的倾向,会使人类客户在与虚拟助理互动时容易受到努力消耗信号的影响。为了检验这一假设,从与现有虚拟助理互动的客户那里收集了数据。结果表明,三种具体行为(参与个人谈话、倾听和表现温暖)促进了客户对VA努力的感知,并且感知VA努力对客户满意度有积极影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
5.60%
发文量
41
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