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Showcasing the diversity of service research: Theories, methods, and success of service articles

Sabine Benoit (Surrey Business School, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK)
Katrin Scherschel (Surrey Business School, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK)
Zelal Ates (Faculty of Business, Economics and Law, TH Köln – University of Applied Sciences, Cologne, Germany) (University of Liège, HEC Liège, Belgium)
Linda Nasr (Department of Marketing, Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas, USA)
Jay Kandampully (Consumer Sciences Program, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA)

Journal of Service Management

ISSN: 1757-5818

Article publication date: 12 October 2017

Issue publication date: 19 October 2017

2738

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to make two main contributions: first, showcase the diversity of service research in terms of the variety of used theories and methods, and second, explain (post-publication) success of articles operationalized as interest in an article (downloads), usage (citations), and awards (best paper nomination). From there, three sub-contributions are derived: stimulate a dialogue about existing norms and practices in the service field, enable and encourage openness amongst service scholars, and motivate scholars to join the field.

Design/methodology/approach

A mixed method approach is used in combining quantitative and qualitative research methods while analyzing 158 Journal of Service Management (JOSM) articles on several criteria such as their theory, methodology, and main descriptive elements (e.g. number of authors or references) and then using automated text analysis (e.g. investigating the readability of articles, etc.).

Findings

The results show that the JOSM publishes a large variety of articles with regard to theories, methods of data collection, and types of data analysis. For example, JOSM has published a mixture of qualitative and quantitative articles and papers containing firm-level and customer-level data. Further, the results show that even though conceptual articles create the same amount of interest (downloads), they are used more (citations).

Research limitations/implications

This paper presents many descriptive results which do not allow for making inferences toward the entire service research discipline. Further, it is only based on one service research journal (JOSM) through a five-year span of publication.

Practical implications

The results have a number of implications for the discipline that are presented and discussed. Amongst them are that: the discipline should be more open toward conceptual articles, service research shows an imbalance toward theory testing, there is more potential to work with transactional data, and writing style should be more accessible (i.e. readable).

Originality/value

This paper is the first to conduct an in-depth analysis of service research articles to stimulate dialogue about common publishing practices in the JOSM and to increase the openness of the field.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This project emerged from the Let’s Talk About Service (LTAS) workshop at the University of Namur, Belgium in December 2015. The authors would thus like to thank the organizers Wafa Hammedi, Bart Larivière, and Annouk Lievens.

Citation

Benoit, S., Scherschel, K., Ates, Z., Nasr, L. and Kandampully, J. (2017), "Showcasing the diversity of service research: Theories, methods, and success of service articles", Journal of Service Management, Vol. 28 No. 5, pp. 810-836. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOSM-05-2017-0102

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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