Smart service value: Conceptualization, scale development, and validation in the retailing context

Sanjit K. Roy, Gaganpreet Singh, Linda D. Hollebeek, Saadia Shabnam, Arnold Japutra, Sebastian van Doorn, Subhasis Ray, Francesco Paolo Appio

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In-store smart technology is rapidly transforming service delivery and value creation in the retail sector. However, despite these advances, academic acumen of customers' perceived value of their smart service interactions remains tenuous, exposing an important omission in extant literature. Addressing this gap, we conceptualize, operationalize, and validate smart service value (SSV) in the retailing context. We first define SSV as the costs and benefits as perceived by customers of using in-store smart service applications. We then operationalize SSV and validate a third-order, reflective-formative construct by means of a scale development survey through Amazon MTurk (study 1; n = 326). To further validate the proposed SSV scale, we subsequently tested our conceptual model using a survey querying a hypothetical retail setting through an Australian panel provider (study 2; n = 298), which was analyzed by using PLS path modeling. Specifically, we explore SSV's effect on customer engagement and trust, which are in turn envisaged to impact customers' quality of life. The results reveal a significant mediating effect of affective customer engagement/trust in the association of SSV and customer-perceived quality of life, highlighting the pertinence of customers' emotional (vs. cognitive) SSV assessments. Our findings are aimed at helping retailers to strategically position smart service technologies in their stores based on customer-perceived SSV.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103097
JournalTechnovation
Volume137
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2024

Keywords

  • Customer engagement
  • Customer trust
  • In-store retail technology
  • Quality of life
  • Smart service value (SSV)

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