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Bringing the individual into the co-creation of value

Kumar Rakesh Ranjan (Business School, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia)
Stuart Read (Atkinson Graduate School of Management, Willamette University, Salem, Oregon, USA)

Journal of Services Marketing

ISSN: 0887-6045

Article publication date: 4 December 2019

Issue publication date: 6 December 2019

1877

Abstract

Purpose

Despite the increasing prominence of value co-creation (VCC) in extant research, the area of customer co-creation is in its infancy and many aspects are not well-understood. This paper aims to important work from the individual psychology literature with the concept of VCC and offers empirical evidence to untested theoretical claims regarding the role of the individual in VCC.

Design/methodology/approach

The investigation begins with reviews of the literature of individual psychology and VCC to compare the concepts they use to explain the role of the individual in co-creation. The results of the theoretical development are empirically derived using a multiple vignette-based study to examine relationships between individual characteristics and the activity of VCC.

Findings

The authors find a positive effect of a customer’s prosocial orientation, perspective taking and involvement on VCC. However, a customer’s extraversion does not affect the degree of VCC. The desire-to-participate mediates these relationships.

Research limitations/implications

This study offers a foundation for some of the central claims about VCC and encourages a precise understanding of the impact of individual customer psychology in value co-creation with firms. Implications for the service-dominant logic of marketing and core work in psychology are discussed.

Practical implications

Managers seeking to design co-creative ecosystems need to know about the individuals they are co-creating with. In this research, the authors clearly exemplify how managers can use in practice a theoretical understanding of individuals to better direct the activity of VCC.

Originality/value

This paper provides both new theoretical knowledge from the parallel literature review and exciting empirical results from the authors’ investigation into phenomenological claims regarding VCC.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The first author would like to acknowledge the financial research support received from Business School, University of Queensland.

Citation

Ranjan, K.R. and Read, S. (2019), "Bringing the individual into the co-creation of value", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 33 No. 7, pp. 904-920. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSM-02-2019-0056

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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