Equilibrating resources and challenges during crises: a framework for service ecosystem well-being

2020 
Purpose: This article explores the impact of crises, such as the coronavirus pandemic, on service industries, service customers, and the service research community It contextualizes pandemics in the realm of disasters and crises, and how they influence actors' well-being across the different levels of the service ecosystem The paper introduces a resources–challenges equilibrium (RCE) framework across system levels to facilitate service ecosystem well-being and outlines a research agenda for service scholars Design/methodology/approach: Literature on disasters, crises, service and well-being is synthesized to embed the COVID-19 pandemic in these bodies of work The material is then distilled to introduce the novel RCE framework for service ecosystems, and points of departure for researchers are developed Findings: A service ecosystems view of well-being co-creation entails a dynamic interplay of actors' challenges faced and resource pools available at the different system levels Research limitations/implications: Service scholars are called to action to conduct timely and relevant research on pandemics and other crises, that affect service industry, service customers, and society at large This conceptual paper focuses on service industries and service research and therefore excludes other industries and research domains Practical implications: Managers of service businesses as well as heads of governmental agencies and policy makers require an understanding of the interdependence of the different system levels and the challenges faced versus the resources available to each individual actor as well as to communities and organizations Social implications: Disasters can change the social as well as the service-related fabric of society and industry New behaviors have to be learned and new processes put in place for society to maintain well-being and for service industry's survival Originality/value: This paper fuses the coronavirus pandemic with service and well-being research, introduces a resources-challenges equilibrium framework for service ecosystem well-being and outlines a research agenda © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited
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