articleJournal of MarketingJan 1, 2003GREEN OA

Psychological Implications of Customer Participation in Co-Production

Fisher College

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Customer participation in the production of goods and services appears to be growing. The marketing literature has largely focused on the economic implications of this trend and has not addressed customers’ potential psychological responses to participation. The authors draw on the social psychological literature on the self-serving bias and conduct two studies to examine the effects of participation on customer satisfaction. Study 1 shows that consistent with the self-serving bias, given an identical outcome, customer satisfaction with a firm differs depending on whether a customer participates in production. Study 2 shows that providing customers a choice in whether to participate mitigates the self-serving…

Citation impact

1,470
total citations
FWCI
28.02
Percentile
100%
References
73
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Outcome (game theory)
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Production (economics)
  • Marketing
  • Business
  • Customer delight
  • Customer retention
  • Psychology
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