Record Details

Anthropomorphic service recovery: the panacea following service failure of automated CSAs

Acta Commercii

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Anthropomorphic service recovery: the panacea following service failure of automated CSAs
 
Creator Dlodlo, Nobukhosi
 
Subject Consumer behaviour anthropomorphism; automated customer service agent; empathy; humour; service failure; perceived trustworthiness
Description Orientation: Automated customer service agents (CSAs) are not mere tools but social interaction entities with anthropomorphic traits capable of predicting consumer responses following unique online service failures scenarios.Research purpose: The study advances the discourse in how automated CSAs can seem more human, with acute understanding of shopper experiences. Thus, anthropomorphism remains an ineluctable ingredient preceding the alteration of shoppers’ trustworthiness perceptions via forgiveness.Motivation for the study: Selected anthropomorphic traits of automated CSAs could make shoppers personify these agents as endowed with human qualities such as humour and response empathy, thereby enhancing the trustworthiness of non-human computer social actors.Research design, approach and method: A scenario-based quantitative survey was distributed as a hyperlink, yielding 287 valid participants.Main findings: The SEM-PLS analysis demonstrated good model fit. The findings showed a significant effect between empathy and anthropomorphism with perceived trustworthiness. In addition, anthropomorphic CSAs provide a trust shield effect, reducing the loss of trust following a service failure. Consequently, shoppers are more willing to forgive the online retailer.Practical/managerial implications: The findings of this study could shape customers’ response mechanisms during failed interactions with automated CSAs, offering salient insights to adequately address service failures while tapping into the judicious utilisation of human-robot collaboration opportunities.Contribution/value-add: The study provides initial lenses for considering the social acting nature of automated CSAs. The positionality in this paper is that during a online service failure, humans pardon and are more trusting of a technological service agent that demonstrates anthropomorphic and humanist attributes.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2025-02-11
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — —
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/ac.v25i2.1348
 
Source Acta Commercii; Vol 25, No 2 (2025); 10 pages 1684-1999 2413-1903
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1348/2519 https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1348/2520 https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1348/2521 https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/1348/2522
 
Coverage Africa — —
Rights Copyright (c) 2025 Nobukhosi Dlodlo https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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