Customer Efficiency, Channel Usage and Firm Performance in Retail Banking

Source:

Manufacturing and Service Operations Management (forthcoming) (2007)

Keywords:

service operations management, service delivery system, self-service technology

Abstract:

Innovations in technology and service design have increasingly enabled firms to incorporate selfservice technology to augment or substitute for “traditional” employee-provided service channels. Although it is clear that self-service can reduce cost, less is known about how customers utilize self-service channels in a multi-channel service delivery system and the resulting impact on firm performance. An important aspect of service operations is that customers are co-producers of the service. Thus, the performance of the delivery system and customers’ use of service channels can be affected by customers’ own efficiency or productivity in service co-production (customer efficiency). In this paper we utilize prior theoretical frameworks in service operations and economics to hypothesize relationships among customer characteristics (especially co-production efficiency), channel utilization, and firm performance. We then test these hypotheses using panel data from a large retail bank. Overall, we find that higher customer efficiency in selfservice channels is associated with greater profitability and has a complex relationship with customer retention and product utilization.

Notes:

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