Abstract

Digitalization has the potential to disrupt many service industries. This is already evident in industries offering standardized business-to-consumer services. Even knowledge-intensive business-to-business (B2B) services have increasingly blended digital technologies. Yet, little is known about how this type of service and its associated service work has changed, as tasks are being increasingly performed by robots or through artificial intelligence. This study fills this void by exploring how frontline workers in two highly knowledge-intensive B2B service industries—auditing and public relations/communication (PR/C) consulting—enact their service work in response to digitalization. Building on an interview study with 50 professionals and taking an interdisciplinary stance we find—contrary to the findings in previous research—that auditing firms embrace digitalization to a larger extent than PR/C firms. Further, we find that the frontline workers’ enactment of their service work is influenced by the fit between technological innovations and the type of intelligence their services are built on, as well as their occupational identities and the service climate within the firms. We conclude the article by developing propositions and a conceptual model, and outline how service firms can support their frontline workers’ infusion of digital technologies in their service work.

Highlights

  • New digital technologies related to automation, robots, and artificial intelligence (AI) enable innovations that could potentially transform and disrupt the service sector (Keating, McColl-Kennedy, and Solnet 2018)

  • This study focuses on how frontline workers enact their service work in times of digitalization and potential disruption

  • While we find the dimensions of service intelligence, occupational identity, and service climate shaping how frontline workers’ enact their service work, we find industry-specific differences

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Summary

Introduction

New digital technologies related to automation, robots, and artificial intelligence (AI) enable innovations that could potentially transform and disrupt the service sector (Keating, McColl-Kennedy, and Solnet 2018). This has led scholars to describe the service industry to be “at an inflection point” 908) and predict that many service industries will need to undergo fundamental changes to meet the potential threat of disruption (Ostrom et al 2015; van Doorn et al 2017).

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