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Galdolage, B. S.

University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Sri Lanka

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ABSTRACT

Technological maturity brings both the organizations and customers into a digital era where organizations provide its service fully or partly through technological platforms, letting customers to perform by themselves without having direct interaction with the organization’s employees. This transforms customers’ role into more ‘active’ to be a collaborative value creator than be a passive recipient of the value produced by the organization. Organizations’ role also converts from ‘provider’ of the value to the ‘value facilitator’, who offer value prepositions for customers’ co-creation process.  Though both the customers’ and business organizations’ roles have been changed in the current business context, the scholarly attention given to understand this transformation is very rare. In such a backdrop, this study aims at understanding customers’ role in co-creating value at SSTs using the foundations of the Role Theory.Centered on the positivistic approach, this research carried out a quantitative survey distributing self-administered questionnaires among 600 customers chosen based on non-probabilistic convenience sampling method. The study found significant positive impacts of ‘role script’, ‘role performance’ and ‘role set’, and insignificant effect of ‘role congruence’ on customer value co-creation in SSTs.The study theoretically contributes to enhancing the knowledge on customer value co-creation in self-service technologies from role theory perspective, while practically helps business organizations to understand customers’ role well and design SSTs which match with the customers’ expectations. 

 

Keywords: Customer, Role Theory, Self-Service Technologies, Value Co-Creation

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Fernando, Imali N.

Senior Lecturer, Uva Wellassa University, Sri Lanka

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ABSTRACT

Tourism has been emphasized as one of the main sources of foreign exchange for different economies in the world, whereas most of the developing countries recognized hospitality, Travel, and Tourism as an inspiring element for socio-economic prosperity. Within previous decades, tourism satisfaction or “choice for destinations” were gradually transformed towards different segments as a paradigm shift. The nature of tourism provides a pathway on socio-economic development, whereby entrepreneurship and venture creations, renewal of forgotten natural resources with new value addition, and diminishing the poverty line. Within this notion, COVID-19 Pandemic identified as a peripheral economic shock whereas distressing remarkably to the global economies contrarily by restricting human mobilization, entertainments, and events while negatively affecting the global economy. This paper adopts the Diamond model proposed by Porter by linking the vulnerability of the tourism industry in Sri Lanka during 1st-2nd waves of the pandemic. Research objectives were developed to identify the way-forwarding strategies on recovering the Tourism amid the COVID-19 pandemic, study sample had been derived by prioritizing the locked-down of the country by targeting key stakeholders, and data were qualitatively gathered. Within the light of the literature, each of the six facets has been identified as “Themes” and qualitatively discussed. As main findings, “situational forces” were emphasized as the most vibrant economic facet within the model, whereas the following main recommendations were proposed as way-forwarding strategies; (a) Safety, security, and political harmony of the country (b) Subsidies for tourism MSMEs and conducive environment for entrepreneurship. (c) Destination promotions / e-promotion platforms (d) Attracting foreign joint-ventures/ investments, (e) Healthy rivalry among the local firms and collective bargaining, (f) Prioritizing Spiritual, Health and wellness, Rural and Ayurveda tourism, (g) Popularizing Tea related Tourism through the brand image of “Ceylon Tea” 

Keywords: COVID-19 Pandemic, External Economic Shocks, Porters’ Diamond Model, Tourism, Way-Forwarding Strategies

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Amarasinghe, D.P.

University of Colombo, Sri Lanka

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 Jayasinghe, J.A.S.C.

Senior Lecturer, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka

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ABSTRACT

A knowledge gap existed in the light of available literature due to a lack of comprehensive understanding and conflicting viewpoints regarding negative brand experience and brand avoidance. This research aims to investigate the impact of negative brand experience on brand avoidance in the Sri Lankan mobile telecommunication industry. Further, it investigates the impact of negative brand experience on negative emotions, negative emotions on brand avoidance and examines the mediating effect of negative emotions in the relationship. This research is a positivistic study done using a questionnaire in selected urban areas based on a convenience sample of 120. An SEM model was used to analyze the data based on SPSS and Amos 23. The research bridges the theoretical gap that existed due to unawareness of simultaneous effects of negative brand experience and negative emotions on brand avoidance in the Sri Lankan context. Findings indicate that negative brand experience positively affects brand avoidance, while negative emotions also positively affect brand avoidance. Further, it realizes that negative brand experience has no significant effect on negative emotions. Finally, the research found that negative emotions have no mediating effect on the relationship between negative brand experience and brand avoidance.     

Keywords: Brand Avoidance, Branding, Mobile Communications, Negative Brand Experience, Negative Emotions

 

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