A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development
This dissertation consists of three essays which progressively develop and refine a model of effective customer and frontline employee involvement in the new service development process. The first essay builds a conceptual model based on the literature; the second essay develops the model constructs...
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Florida State University
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Marketing A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development |
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This dissertation consists of three essays which progressively develop and refine a model of effective customer and frontline employee involvement in the new service development process. The first essay builds a conceptual model based on the literature; the second essay develops the model constructs and relationships based on findings from a series of in-depth interviews; and the third essay consists of an empirical study which tests the hypothesized model with data from a survey of senior managers who are directly involved in the new service development process of their organizations. Essay 1: Prior research describes how service firms involve customers and frontline employees in the new service development process, but no studies have examined how that involvement relates to NSD key success factors and performance outcomes. This study proposes a model of how customer, frontline employee and entrepreneurial leader participation in various stages of the NSD process directly affects project success factors and indirectly influences the operational and financial performance of service innovation initiatives. The paper identifies opportunities for future research and proposes exploratory and quantitative studies to refine and test the model. Essay 2: Many service firms rely on innovation strategies to build competitive advantage. This exploratory study proposes a model of new service development that enhances performance outcomes by prescribing specific roles for customers and frontline employees in the new service development process. Service innovation project outcomes improve when customers and frontline employees participate in the process in ways that positively affect the project's service marketability, deliverability, launch preparation and launch effectiveness. Findings are based on interviews with managers from nine service firms across a broad variety of service sectors. Recommendations are offered for future empirical research to further refine the model. Essay 3: Service firms recognize the major role of product and process innovation in building and sustaining competitive advantage in the marketplace. This empirical study tests a model of new service development that enhances performance outcomes by prescribing specific roles for customers and frontline employees in the new service development process. Findings are based on survey data collected from organizations across a variety of service sectors. The study provides support for hypotheses that customer and frontline employee participation in specific stages of the new service development process positively affects the project's service marketability, deliverability, launch preparation and launch effectiveness. The influence of customers and frontline employees on project performance outcomes is indirect and mediated by new service development success factors. Recommendations are offered for future empirical research to further refine the model. === A Dissertation Submitted to the Department of Marketing in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Fall Semester, 2007. === July 12, 2007. === Frontline Employee, New Service Development, Service Marketability, New Product Development, Customer === Includes bibliographical references. === Michael D. Hartline, Professor Directing Dissertation; Ceasar Douglas, Outside Committee Member; Michael J. Showalter, Committee Member; Ruby P. Lee, Committee Member. |
author2 |
Melton, Horace L (authoraut) |
author_facet |
Melton, Horace L (authoraut) |
title |
A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development |
title_short |
A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development |
title_full |
A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development |
title_fullStr |
A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development |
title_sort |
framework for effective customer and frontline employee involvement in new service development |
publisher |
Florida State University |
url |
http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-2491 |
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1719318400638910464 |
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ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1806842020-06-09T03:09:32Z A Framework for Effective Customer and Frontline Employee Involvement in New Service Development Melton, Horace L (authoraut) Hartline, Michael D. (professor directing dissertation) Douglas, Ceasar (outside committee member) Showalter, Michael J. (committee member) Lee, Ruby P. (committee member) Department of Marketing (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf This dissertation consists of three essays which progressively develop and refine a model of effective customer and frontline employee involvement in the new service development process. The first essay builds a conceptual model based on the literature; the second essay develops the model constructs and relationships based on findings from a series of in-depth interviews; and the third essay consists of an empirical study which tests the hypothesized model with data from a survey of senior managers who are directly involved in the new service development process of their organizations. Essay 1: Prior research describes how service firms involve customers and frontline employees in the new service development process, but no studies have examined how that involvement relates to NSD key success factors and performance outcomes. This study proposes a model of how customer, frontline employee and entrepreneurial leader participation in various stages of the NSD process directly affects project success factors and indirectly influences the operational and financial performance of service innovation initiatives. The paper identifies opportunities for future research and proposes exploratory and quantitative studies to refine and test the model. Essay 2: Many service firms rely on innovation strategies to build competitive advantage. This exploratory study proposes a model of new service development that enhances performance outcomes by prescribing specific roles for customers and frontline employees in the new service development process. Service innovation project outcomes improve when customers and frontline employees participate in the process in ways that positively affect the project's service marketability, deliverability, launch preparation and launch effectiveness. Findings are based on interviews with managers from nine service firms across a broad variety of service sectors. Recommendations are offered for future empirical research to further refine the model. Essay 3: Service firms recognize the major role of product and process innovation in building and sustaining competitive advantage in the marketplace. This empirical study tests a model of new service development that enhances performance outcomes by prescribing specific roles for customers and frontline employees in the new service development process. Findings are based on survey data collected from organizations across a variety of service sectors. The study provides support for hypotheses that customer and frontline employee participation in specific stages of the new service development process positively affects the project's service marketability, deliverability, launch preparation and launch effectiveness. The influence of customers and frontline employees on project performance outcomes is indirect and mediated by new service development success factors. Recommendations are offered for future empirical research to further refine the model. A Dissertation Submitted to the Department of Marketing in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Fall Semester, 2007. July 12, 2007. Frontline Employee, New Service Development, Service Marketability, New Product Development, Customer Includes bibliographical references. Michael D. Hartline, Professor Directing Dissertation; Ceasar Douglas, Outside Committee Member; Michael J. Showalter, Committee Member; Ruby P. Lee, Committee Member. Marketing FSU_migr_etd-2491 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-2491 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A180684/datastream/TN/view/Framework%20for%20Effective%20Customer%20and%20Frontline%20Employee%20Involvement%20in%20New%20Service%20Development.jpg |