感觉被操纵:小费请求顺序如何影响顾客和服务提供者?

Feeling Manipulated: How Tip Request Sequence Impacts Customers and Service Providers?

JOURNAL OF SERVICE RESEARCH · 2020
被引 61
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

研究在服务前还是服务后请求小费对顾客和服务提供者的影响,发现服务前请求小费会导致小费更少、回头意愿和口碑降低,其心理机制是顾客感知到操纵意图。

Abstract

Technology is changing frontline service scripts. Businesses are now using mobile point-of-sale applications (e.g., Square) and mobile technology (e.g., iPad) to prompt customers for tips. Tip requests are occurring more frequently at the start of service transactions, before any service has been provided. This research examines how requesting a tip either before or after service completion affects customers and service providers. We test the effects of preservice versus postservice tip sequence in four studies (a natural experiment in the field and three controlled experiments) across food and beauty service contexts. Findings reveal that requesting a tip before (vs. after) completing a service leads to smaller tips, reduced return intentions, diminished word-of-mouth intentions, and lower online ratings. Inferred manipulative intent is revealed as the psychological mechanism underlying the harmful effects of requesting a tip before service. Findings suggest that emphasizing the benefits of automated point-of-sale systems can reduce, but not eliminate, the negative effects of preservice tip requests. Contrary to norms within the service industry, we find that service providers should avoid requesting tips before serving customers.

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