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Co-creation and higher order customer engagement in hospitality and tourism services: A critical review

Prakash K. Chathoth (Department of Marketing and Information Systems, School of Business Administration, American University of Sharjah, Sharjah, UAE)
Gerardo R. Ungson (College of Business, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California, USA)
Robert J. Harrington (School of Human Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA)
Eric S.W. Chan (School of Hotel and Tourism Management, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong)

International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management

ISSN: 0959-6119

Article publication date: 8 February 2016

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Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to present a review of the literature associated with co-creation and higher-order customer engagement concepts and poses critical questions related to the current state of research. Additionally, the paper presents a framework for customer engagement and co-creation with relevance to hospitality transactions.

Design/methodology/approach

Earlier research on co-production, co-creation, consumer engagement and service-dominant logic are discussed and synthesized. Based on this synthesis, links and contrasts of these varying research streams are presented providing an articulation of key characteristics of each and how these might be applied within a hospitality context.

Findings

Modalities in service transactions vary among traditional production, co-production and co-creation based on changes in attitudes, enabling technologies and the logic or ideology supporting the change. Transaction characteristics vary among manufacturing, quasi-manufacturing and services based on several key categories including differences in boundary conditions, enablers, success requirements, sustainability requirements, the dominant logic used and key barriers/vulnerabilities. When creating experiential value for consumers, firms should consider several aspects ex-ante, in-situ and ex-post of the change and during the change process.

Research limitations/implications

Firms need to move toward higher-order customer engagement using co-creative modalities to enhance value creation. Current practices in the hotel industry may not in their entirety support this notion. Ex-ante, in-situ and ex-post considerations for creating experiential value need to be used as part of a checklist of questions for firms to pose in order to move toward managing customer experiences using the service-dominant logic as part of the firm’s orientation toward its market. This would give it the required thrust to create superior engagement platforms that use co-creative modalities while addressing the barriers to higher-order customer engagement as identified in the literature.

Originality/value

The hospitality and tourism literature on co-creation and higher-order customer engagement is still in its infancy. A synthesis of these early studies provides support for the need for future research on co-creation that more clearly articulates the modality firms could use to move toward co-creation. This paper develops a dynamic framework using characteristics of co-creation that integrate the various stages of value creation (i.e. input, throughput and output).

Keywords

Citation

Chathoth, P.K., Ungson, G.R., Harrington, R.J. and Chan, E.S.W. (2016), "Co-creation and higher order customer engagement in hospitality and tourism services: A critical review", International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, Vol. 28 No. 2, pp. 222-245. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-10-2014-0526

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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