What is it about?

From a Service-Dominant Logic (S-DL) perspective, employees constitute operant resources that firms can draw to enhance the outcomes of innovation efforts. While research acknowledges that frontline employees (FLEs) constitute, through service encounters, a key interface for the transfer of valuable external knowledge into the firm, the range of potential benefits derived from FLE-driven innovation deserves more investigation. Using a sample of knowledge intensive business services firms (KIBS), this study examines how the collaboration with FLEs along the new service development (NSD) process, namely FLE co-creation, impacts on service innovation performance following two routes of different effects.

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Why is it important?

By using partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) our results indicate that FLE co-creation benefits the NS success among FLEs and firm’s customers, the constituents of the resources route. FLE co-creation also has a positive effect on the NSD speed, which in turn enhances the NS quality. NSD speed and NS quality integrate the operational route, which proves to be the most effective path to impact the NS market performance. Accordingly, KIBS managers must value their FLEs as essential partners to achieve successful innovation from an internal and external perspective, and develop the appropriate mechanisms to guarantee their effective involvement along the NSD process.

Perspectives

This study contributes to the service innovation and S-DL literatures by empirically demonstrating that FLE co-creation, understood as NS development with the collaboration of FLEs across all the stages of the innovation process, contributes to service innovation performance from an internal and external perspective. Our model expands prior research, as it reinforces FLEs’ role as a key knowledge interface along the NSDP, provides a detailed description of how FLE co-creation affects different performance measures not previously considered in the same study, and allows understanding of how FLE co-creation effects interrelate and move on, following two different routes.

Dr José Ángel López Sánchez
Universidad de Extremadura

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Frontline employees’ collaboration in industrial service innovation: routes of co-creation’s effects on new service performance, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, May 2015, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s11747-015-0447-4.
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