Publication | Closed Access
Designing crowdsourced delivery systems: The effect of driver disclosure and ethnic similarity
144
Citations
101
References
2018
Year
Customer SatisfactionDigital MarketingEthnic SimilarityConsumer ResearchSocial InfluenceCommunicationOnline Customer BehaviorComputational Social ScienceBiasHospitality MarketingManagementConsumer BehaviorCustomer InvolvementUser PerceptionHuman ComputationSocial IdentityConsumer Decision MakingAlgorithmic BiasParticipatory SensingCustomer ParticipationInformation ManagementCrowdsourcingSocial Identity TheoryDelivery SystemMarketingAbstract Crowdsourced DeliveryCrowd ComputingSocial ComputingInteractive MarketingDriver DisclosureBusinessService InteractionHuman-computer InteractionMarketing InsightsCrowdsourced Delivery Systems
Abstract Crowdsourced delivery is a service operations model that has proliferated in recent years, bringing unique opportunities and challenges to online retail operations. In particular, new technology enabled features, such as the disclosure of delivery drivers' identities, introduce a social dimension prior to delivery service encounters that might influence customers' service quality expectations and ultimately impact their attitudes towards the retailers. Building on premises of social identity theory, this research investigates effects of various crowdsourced delivery system designs related to driver disclosure and ethnicity on customers' attitudes towards the drivers and retailers. Using data from a scenario‐based experiment with 761 participants across two studies, we find that crowdsourced delivery designs that disclose drivers' identity increase customers' trust, satisfaction, and repurchase intentions only when customers perceive the drivers to be similar to them, particularly with regard to ethnicity. The designs that offer driver choice options are also found to be highly regarded by customers. In addition, the similarity effects of crowdsourced delivery designs differ depending on certain customer characteristics. Overall, our research shows crowdsourced delivery ‐ as a technology‐driven phenomenon ‐ may portend unexpected and challenging social dilemmas for operations managers. Our findings contribute to emerging research on the intersection of service design, technology management, and the sharing economy.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1