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Should service firms introduce algorithmic advice to their existing customers? The moderating effect of service relationships
Institution:1. Eastern Switzerland University of Applied Sciences, Institute of Strategy and Marketing, Rosenbergstrasse 59, 9001, St. Gallen, Switzerland;2. RWTH Aachen University, TIME Research Area, Chair of Marketing, Kackertstraße 7, 52072, Aachen, Germany;3. Bern University of Applied Sciences, Institute for Digital Technology Management, Brückenstrasse 73, 3005, Bern, Switzerland
Abstract:An increasing number of service firms are introducing algorithmic advice to their customers. In this research, we examine the introduction of such tools from a relational perspective and show that the type of relationship a customer has with a service firm moderates his or her response to algorithmic advice. Studies 1 and 2 find that customers in communal relationships are more reluctant to use algorithmic advice instead of human advice than customers in exchange relationships. Study 3 shows that offering customers algorithmic advice may harm communal relationships but not exchange relationships. Building on these findings, Studies 4, 5, and 6 examine how firms can mitigate the potentially negative relational consequences of algorithmic advice. While a fallback option that signals that customers can request additional human advice if needed is effective in preventing relational damages in communal relationships, this same intervention backfires in exchange relationships. These findings have important implications by showing that managers need to consider the relational consequences of introducing algorithmic advice to existing customers.
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