Introducing a sensemaking perspective to the service experience
Kemppainen, T., & Uusitalo, O. (2022). Introducing a sensemaking perspective to the service experience. Journal of Service Theory and Practice, 32(2), 283-301. https://doi.org/10.1108/jstp-02-2021-0030
Published in
Journal of Service Theory and PracticeDate
2022Discipline
Kestävä liiketoiminta ja talous (painoala)MarkkinointiSustainable BusinessResurssiviisausyhteisöBasic or discovery scholarshipSustainable Business and Economy (focus area)MarketingSustainable BusinessSchool of Resource WisdomBasic or discovery scholarshipCopyright
© 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited
Purpose
Most recent service experience research considers customers as sensemakers and sensemaking as a focal process in experience construction. Despite this, the sensemaking theory engendered in organization studies has not been applied in the quest for an in-depth understanding of the service experience. This study introduces a sensemaking perspective to the service experience and develops a conceptualization of how customers construct their experiences cognitively through sensemaking.
Design/methodology/approach
The service experience literature is dominated by a focus on firms implementing service experiences for customers. This study, in contrast, investigates service experience and its formation from the customers' viewpoint: how service experiences are formed as a part of customers' everyday life and sensemaking processes instead of under service providers' control.
Findings
Service experience is characterized as a mental picture – a collage of meanings created by a customer through the sensemaking processes. A sensemaking framework that characterizes service experience formation and its four seminal dimensions, including the self-related, sociomaterial, retrospective and prospective sensemaking, is introduced.
Originality/value
This article contributes to the service literature by introducing a new theoretical lens through which the service experience concept can be investigated and reframed.
...
Publisher
EmeraldISSN Search the Publication Forum
2055-6225Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/102385185
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Kauppakorkeakoulu [1368]
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
A Customer Perspective on Omnichannel Customer Journey and Channel Usage : A Qualitative Study
Mali, Eveliina; Paananen, Tiina; Frank, Lauri; Makkonen, Markus (RWTH Aachen, 2022)This qualitative study investigates customer behavior during the omnichannel customer journey. The study aims to increase the understanding of omnichannel service environments from a customer-centric point of view. The ... -
Dualities of digital services : everyday digital services as positive and negative contributors to customer well-being
Kemppainen, Tiina; Paananen, Tiina Elina (Emerald, 2024)Purpose This study examines the dualities of digital services – that is, how customers’ favorite everyday digital services can positively and negatively contribute to their well-being. Thus, the study describes the meanings ... -
Exploring positive online customer experience formation : a study of food waste shoppers
Kemppainen, Tiina; Frank, Lauri (Association for Information Systems, 2022)This qualitative study investigates the formation of positive online customer experiences in the context of online grocery shopping. This study analyzes customers’ written descriptions of the causes of their positive ... -
Customer experience in B2B Saas business
Bene, Mónika (2020)Customer experience has become one of the focus areas of both marketing practice and theory in the recent few years. While the amount of customer touchpoints and channels has increased, companies have less power than ever ... -
Design Principles for Virtual Reality Applications Used in Collaborative Service Encounters
Pöyry, Essi; Holopainen, Jani; Parvinen, Petri; Mattila, Osmo; Tuunanen, Tuure (SAGE Publications, 2024)Immersive technologies like virtual reality (VR) provide new opportunities to augment service encounters by supporting customer–service agent collaboration and problem-solving. Guided by the value cocreation and service ...