Value in the accumulated experience

Over the last decade access to cheap enabling technology has promoted widespread practitioner interest in online service propositions. In support of these propositions technology has become prominently established within the firm-consumer interface through self-service technologies (SSTs). SSTs ar...

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Main Author: Callaghan, Andrew
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38102/
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author Callaghan, Andrew
author_facet Callaghan, Andrew
author_sort Callaghan, Andrew
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Over the last decade access to cheap enabling technology has promoted widespread practitioner interest in online service propositions. In support of these propositions technology has become prominently established within the firm-consumer interface through self-service technologies (SSTs). SSTs are attractive to firms due to opportunities for cost reduction and the targeting of previously in-accessible customer segments. This attractiveness has led to an increasing shift in the mode of service provision from traditional personal service delivery to SSTs, which have evolved from limited time saving alternatives to the proliferation of chargeable subscription-based services in operation today. However, the viability of these channels relies on the customers’ perception of value creation and the degree to which the SST contributes to it. Consequently, realising the potential benefits from SSTs has continued to be problematic for firms as they still have a poor understanding of how value is co-created across technology interfaces. Key to understanding this phenomenon is how value emerges through the customer experience, which has now transcended the traditional consumer/firm perspective to include the users’ wider social network of actors. This is a gap in the literature and an important area of enquiry since it directly affects subscription channel uptake and long-term customer retention. To date the extant empirical literature has not conceptualised value as emerging through the customers’ experience or included current marketing thought, which views the customer as a resource integrator that co-creates value within a wider social network of actors. The contribution of this study lies in the development of a new measurement instrument that addresses these gaps and captures experiential value in an online subscription context. The context is Royal Mail’s online postage channel (SmartStamp®) and the research is set within the value literature. Service Dominant Logic specifies that value is always uniquely and phenomenologically determined by the beneficiary, which has led to criticism (by the phenomenological school of thought) of the way multi-dimensional value models have previously made knowledge claims about value, since it is potentially both subjective and context specific. Uniquely, this research seeks to empirically address the phenomenological criticisms using accumulated experience as the mainstay of claims to ontological and epistemological legitimacy. The conceptualisation of experiential value in this thesis is applicable to most online subscription contexts and the contribution of this study also extends to informing future studies in this topical and important area.
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spelling nottingham-381022025-02-28T13:35:28Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38102/ Value in the accumulated experience Callaghan, Andrew Over the last decade access to cheap enabling technology has promoted widespread practitioner interest in online service propositions. In support of these propositions technology has become prominently established within the firm-consumer interface through self-service technologies (SSTs). SSTs are attractive to firms due to opportunities for cost reduction and the targeting of previously in-accessible customer segments. This attractiveness has led to an increasing shift in the mode of service provision from traditional personal service delivery to SSTs, which have evolved from limited time saving alternatives to the proliferation of chargeable subscription-based services in operation today. However, the viability of these channels relies on the customers’ perception of value creation and the degree to which the SST contributes to it. Consequently, realising the potential benefits from SSTs has continued to be problematic for firms as they still have a poor understanding of how value is co-created across technology interfaces. Key to understanding this phenomenon is how value emerges through the customer experience, which has now transcended the traditional consumer/firm perspective to include the users’ wider social network of actors. This is a gap in the literature and an important area of enquiry since it directly affects subscription channel uptake and long-term customer retention. To date the extant empirical literature has not conceptualised value as emerging through the customers’ experience or included current marketing thought, which views the customer as a resource integrator that co-creates value within a wider social network of actors. The contribution of this study lies in the development of a new measurement instrument that addresses these gaps and captures experiential value in an online subscription context. The context is Royal Mail’s online postage channel (SmartStamp®) and the research is set within the value literature. Service Dominant Logic specifies that value is always uniquely and phenomenologically determined by the beneficiary, which has led to criticism (by the phenomenological school of thought) of the way multi-dimensional value models have previously made knowledge claims about value, since it is potentially both subjective and context specific. Uniquely, this research seeks to empirically address the phenomenological criticisms using accumulated experience as the mainstay of claims to ontological and epistemological legitimacy. The conceptualisation of experiential value in this thesis is applicable to most online subscription contexts and the contribution of this study also extends to informing future studies in this topical and important area. 2016-12-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38102/1/PhD%20SubmissionFinal%204.pdf Callaghan, Andrew (2016) Value in the accumulated experience. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Value measurement co-creation experience
spellingShingle Value
measurement
co-creation
experience
Callaghan, Andrew
Value in the accumulated experience
title Value in the accumulated experience
title_full Value in the accumulated experience
title_fullStr Value in the accumulated experience
title_full_unstemmed Value in the accumulated experience
title_short Value in the accumulated experience
title_sort value in the accumulated experience
topic Value
measurement
co-creation
experience
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38102/