Litcius/Paper detail

The Robotic-Human Service Trilemma: the challenges for well-being within the human service triad

Chelsea Phillips, Rebekah Russell‐Bennett, Gaby Odekerken‐Schröder, Dominik Mahr, Kate Letheren

2023Journal of service management27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose The human service triad (i.e. the relationship between the customer, frontline employee (FLE) and managerial employee) experiences a range of well-being challenges when faced with the introduction of service robots. Despite growth in service robot scholarship, understanding of the well-being challenges affecting the human service triad remains fragmented. Hence, the purpose of this paper is to synthesise the literature and offer a research agenda aligned with the proposed Robotic-Human Service Trilemma. By taking a job performance approach (which considers the actions, behaviours and outcomes linked to organisational goals), the Robotic-Human Service Trilemma conceptualises three well-being challenges (intrusion, sideline and interchange). These challenges are realised via the realistic capabilities and constraints of service robot implementation. Design/methodology/approach This research relies on a systematic review of all disciplines concerning service robots. In total, 82 articles were analysed using thematic coding and led to the development of the Robotic-Human Service Trilemma and research agenda. Findings The analyses reveal the Robotic-Human Service Trilemma consists of three challenges: intrusion, sideline and indifference. The findings demonstrate that FLEs are required to counterbalance the constraints of service robots, leading to an uneven well-being burden within the human service triad. This paper suggests a research agenda for investigation of the challenges that underpin the Robotic-Human Service Trilemma. Originality/value Through the conceptualisation of the Robotic-Human Service Trilemma, this study is the first to explore how states of well-being equilibrium exist within the human service triad and how these states are challenged by service robots. The authors present a balanced centricity perspective to well-being that contrasts previous trade-off approaches and that enhances the body of service robot literature with a well-being lens.

Topics & Concepts

TrilemmaService (business)Service designKnowledge managementThematic analysisProcess managementService providerBusinessComputer scienceMarketingSociologyQualitative researchSocial scienceExchange rateFinanceAI in Service InteractionsService and Product InnovationDigital Economy and Work Transformation