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Download fileThe personal and contextual factors that affect customer experience during rail service failures and the implications for service design
journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-09, 13:09 authored by Tracy RossTracy Ross, Stuart CockbillStuart Cockbill, Andrew MayAndrew May© 2020 The Authors This paper: identifies personal and contextual factors that influence customer experience when service failures occur in rail transport; what is being conveyed through that factor (e.g. older age being used to convey vulnerability); and the implications for future service design. The results are from a thematic analysis of free-text rail passenger complaints (n = 516) reporting service failures that impacted on customer experience. The study differs from existing research on the pertinent personal and contextual factors for public transport service provision in that it: focuses on the passenger experience resulting from specific incidents (rather than evaluative, overall assessments of satisfaction), generates the factors inductively from the data (rather than a-priori) and uses detailed qualitative cases (rather than quantitative survey data). The findings (1) identify some similar factors to those used in previous research and uncover some new factors for both person and context, (2) provide an understanding of what they mean in terms of the passenger experience and (3) indicate how the factors might need to be measured if they are to be used by the rail industry. The paper concludes by using the outcome of an industry-based validation exercise to describe how the findings could be used in future rail services, namely: predicting where the customer experience is going to be sub-optimal, prioritising responses to particular circumstances, and designing services to better meet customer's needs. This exploratory research is timely, given the need for a more passenger-centric approach to service design and future developments such as smart-ticketing, which could potentially enable greater understanding of who is using the rail network and for what journeys.
Funding
Improving customer experience while ensuring data privacy for intelligent mobility
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Find out more...History
School
- Design
Published in
Applied ErgonomicsVolume
86Pages
103096Publisher
ElsevierVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© The authorsPublisher statement
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Elsevier under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Acceptance date
2020-03-05Publication date
2020-03-20Copyright date
2020ISSN
0003-6870eISSN
1872-9126Publisher version
Language
- en