Hotel managers’ perceptions towards the use of robots: a mixed-methods approach
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Date
2020
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Information Technology and Tourism
Open Access Color
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Abstract
Adopting a supply-side perspective, the paper analyses Bulgarian hotel managers’ perceptions of service robots using a convergent mixed methods design. Structured quantitative data were collected from 79 managers using a questionnaire, while interviews were used for the collection of qualitative data from 20 managers. The findings indicate respondents feel that repetitive, dirty, dull, and dangerous tasks in hotels would be more appropriate for robots, while hotel managers would rather use employees for tasks that require social skills and emotional intelligence. The individual characteristics of respondents and the organisational characteristics of the hotels they currently worked in played little role in their perceptions of service robots. The managers considered that robots would decrease the quality of the service and were generally not ready to use robots. Additionally, the interviewees indicated that skilled and well-trained employees were more valuable and more adequate than robots for the hospitality and tourism industry. Theoretical and managerial implications are provided as well.
Description
Keywords
robots, supply-side perspective, managers’ perceptions, automation of tasks, impacts of service robots, hotel industry, Bulgaria
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
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Citation
WoS Q
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Source
Information Technology and Tourism
Volume
22
Issue
4
Start Page
505
End Page
535