Litcius/Paper detail

Smart hotels but not necessarily smart decisions: the smartness paradox

IpKin Anthony Wong, Ya Xiao, Zhiwei Lin, Danni Sun, Jingwen Huang, Matthew Tingchi Liu

2024International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Purpose This paper aims to answer questions pertinent to whether or not services provided by smart hotels are really what customers are looking for, as well as to ascertain what are some unintended experiences guests may encounter. In essence, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, this research is the first in the field to acknowledge the paradox of smart service. Design/methodology/approach This inquiry adopts a qualitative approach with data-driven from online customer reviews and semistructured interviews. Thematic analysis was undertaken to interpret review comments. Findings Results point to a new phenomenon, which is coined as the smartness paradox. In particular, customers on one hand enjoy an array of smart-infused experiences that jointly offer patrons a sense of a futuristic lifestyle. On the other hand, smart devices superimpose a number of hindrances that bring guests dismay and annoyance. Research limitations/implications This investigation brings smart service failure to the fore to highlight several key failure themes that could jeopardize the entire operation with debased customers’ satisfaction and loyalty inclination. Originality/value The smartness-paradox framework used in the present inquiry entails both approach and avoidance consequences customers enact depending on their smart experiences.

Topics & Concepts

OriginalityThematic analysisValue (mathematics)Service (business)Unintended consequencesField (mathematics)PhenomenonQualitative researchLoyaltyMarketingKey (lock)Service qualitySociologyComputer sciencePsychologyBusinessEpistemologyComputer securityPure mathematicsMachine learningSocial sciencePhilosophyMathematicsAI in Service InteractionsDigital Marketing and Social MediaConsumer Retail Behavior Studies