Citation:
Benedetta Crisafulli, Jaywant Singh. Managing online service recovery: procedures, justice and customer satisfaction. Journal of Service Theory and Practice, Vol. 26, Iss. 6, pp764-787
Abstract:
Purpose
The Internet has changed the way services are delivered and has created new forms of
customer-firm interactions. Whilst online service failures remain inevitable, the Internet
offers opportunities for delivering efficient service recovery through the online channel.
Notwithstanding, research evidence on how firms can deliver online service recovery remains
scarce. This study investigates the impact of two online service recovery strategies - online
information and technology-mediated communication - on customer satisfaction, switching
and word-of-mouth intentions.
Design/methodology/approach
A scenario-based experiment is employed. Data are analysed using partial least squares
structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM).
Findings
Online information and technology-mediated interactions can be used as online service
recovery strategies. When fair, online service recovery can restore customer satisfaction,
lower switching and enhance positive word-of-mouth. Interactional justice delivered through
technology-mediated communication is a strong predictor of satisfaction with online service
recovery. Yet, customers in subscription services show greater expectations of online service
recovery than those in non-subscription services.
Research limitations/implications
Further research could examine the impact of online service recovery on relational constructs,
such as trust. Since customers participate in the online recovery process, future research
could investigate the role of customers as co-creators of online service recovery.
Practical implications
Service managers should design online recovery strategies that meet customer need for
interactional justice, for example, bespoke emails, and virtual chat communications showing
genuine customer care.
Originality/value
Online information and technology-mediated communication function as online service
recovery strategies. Customer perceptions of