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Seeking empathy or suggesting a solution? Effects of chatbot messages on service failure recovery

Martin Haupt, Anna Rozumowski, Jan Freidank, Alexander Haas

2023Electronic Markets45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Chatbots as prominent form of conversational agents are increasingly implemented as a user interface for digital customer-firm interactions on digital platforms and electronic markets, but they often fail to deliver suitable responses to user requests. In turn, individuals are left dissatisfied and turn away from chatbots, which harms successful chatbot implementation and ultimately firm’s service performance. Based on the stereotype content model, this paper explores the impact of two universally usable failure recovery messages as a strategy to preserve users’ post-recovery satisfaction and chatbot re-use intentions. Results of three experiments show that chatbot recovery messages have a positive effect on recovery responses, mediated by different elicited social cognitions. In particular, a solution-oriented message elicits stronger competence evaluations, whereas an empathy-seeking message leads to stronger warmth evaluations. The preference for one of these message types over the other depends on failure attribution and failure frequency. This study provides meaningful insights for chatbot technology developers and marketers seeking to understand and improve customer experience with digital conversational agents in a cost-effective way.

Topics & Concepts

ChatbotEmpathyService (business)AttributionService recoveryInternet privacyComputer sciencePsychologyWorld Wide WebBusinessSocial psychologyMarketingService qualityAI in Service InteractionsDigital Marketing and Social MediaSentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining