KOREASCHOLAR

ENGAGEMENT AND VALUE CO-CREATION: THE INTERNAL FOSTERING AND HINDERING (F)ACTORS OF CUSTOMER’S ENGAGEMENT IN THE HOTEL EXPERIENCE

Nangpiire Clement, Joaquim Silva, Helena Maria Baptista Alves
  • LanguageENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/350670
Global Marketing Conference
2018 Global Marketing Conference at Tokyo (2018.07)
p.111
글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 (Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations)
Abstract

The service setting is more than ever dynamic. Customers’ engagement is changing due to the multiple interactions at different levels of the consumption experience journey. The customer as an active and engaged value co-creator raises new challenges to theory and practice. However, the connection between engagement and co-creation is scarce in the literature. The experience of the active hotel customer occurs through customer engagement with internal actors and factors from prepurchase through to post-purchase. Since value co-creation results from the engagement of multiple factors and actors (f/actors) in the process, it is essential to understand the actors’ activities that promote or obstruct this process. This paper proposes a connection between customer engagement (CE) and value co-creation framework to ascertain and depict the internal actors’ activities and factors that foster or hinder customers’ experience in the hotel industry. The researchers used qualitative methods (35 in-depth interviews, document analysis and 4 observation sessions) in seven regions in Ghana to explore the customer’s perspective. Data was analysed with Nvivo11, within a thematic analysis framework. Findings suggest that customer’s engagement within the hotel environment with multiple actors has an influence on customer value co-creation/destruction process. It found that positive and negative engagement fosters/hinders guests’ interactions which lead to value cocreation/ destruction. The research also discovered that negative interactions occasioned by any factor/actor triggers value destruction at multiple stages of the experience journey. The study suggests theoretical and managerial implications focused on the actors’ practices that foster or hinder customer engagement and value co-creation.

Author
  • Nangpiire Clement(University of Minho, Portugal)
  • Joaquim Silva(University of Minho, Portugal)
  • Helena Maria Baptista Alves(University of Beira Interior, Portugal)