University of Sussex
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Stakeholder engagement with AI service interactions

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-24, 15:35 authored by Terrence Chong, Ting Yu, Debbie KeelingDebbie Keeling, Ko de Ruyter, Tim Hilken
Recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) have ushered in a wave of AI innovations in the form of embodied conversational agents (ECAs). These stakeholders offer new ways to engage customers in the co-creation of services but still face significant customer skepticism. To address this challenge, we frame interactions between customers and ECAs through the lens of stakeholder engagement and apply the concept of proxy agency from social cognitive theory. This framework allows us to identify two primary stakeholder roles for ECAs: partner and servant. We conceptualize how these roles inform optimal ECA design and shape a two-stage value-by-proxy process, comprising proxy efficacy and outcome expectancy. Additionally, we uncover tensions within this process due to over-reliance on AI, as well as significant outcomes that extend beyond the immediate interaction. Our study, using a custom-developed ECA and a sample of 596 U.S.-based respondents, reveals that positioning an ECA in a partner role, combined with a human (vs. robot) appearance and emotional (vs. functional) conversation style, has the strongest positive impact on perceived value-by-proxy, usage and advice implementation intentions, and willingness to pay. We also observe an inverted U-shaped moderation by reliance in the relationship between proxy efficacy and outcome expectancy, signaling the potential risks of over-reliance on AI. Furthermore, we provide qualitative insights into why some customers avoid engaging with ECAs. Overall, we offer a nuanced perspective on ECAs as active stakeholders within organizational systems, advancing both theoretical understanding and practical applications of this rapidly evolving technology.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Journal of Product Innovation Management

ISSN

0737-6782

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Department affiliated with

  • Professional Services Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes