According to service-dominant logic (S-D logic),
all providers are service providers, and service is the
fundamental basis of exchange. Value is co-created with
customers and assessed on the basis of value-in-context.
However, the extensive literature on S-D logic could
benefit from paying explicit attention to the fact that both
service exchange and value co-creation are influenced by
social forces. The aim of this study is to expand
understanding of service exchange and value co-creation
by complementing these central aspects of S-D logic with
key concepts from social construction theories (social
structures, social systems, roles, positions, interactions,
and reproduction of social structures). The study develops
and describes a new framework for understanding how the
concepts of service exchange and value co-creation are
affected by recognizing that they are embedded in social
systems. The study contends that value should be understood
as value-in-social-context and that value is a social
construction. Value co-creation is shaped by social forces,
is reproduced in social structures, and can be asymmetric
for the actors involved. Service exchanges are dynamic, and actors learn and change their roles within dynamic service
systems.
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Business
Citation
EDVARDSSON, B., TRONVOLL, B. and GRUBER, T., 2011. Expanding understanding of service exchange and value co-creation: a social construction approach. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 39, pp. 327 - 339.