– This paper aims to study front-line employees’ contribution to service innovation, when they contribute and how they are involved in service innovation.
– The paper draws on a multiple-case study on service innovation in four organizations with extensive front-line employee involvement. The main data collection methods are interviews and observations.
– The paper suggests that front-line employees contribute customer knowledge, product knowledge and practice knowledge during five phases of the service innovation process – project formation, idea generation, service design, testing and implementation – and that front-line employee involvement ranges from active to passive.
– Statistical generalization of the results is needed.
– The paper reveals that early and active front-line employee involvement in the service innovation process creates conditions for a positive contribution to service innovation.
– The paper suggests that early and active knowledge contributions by front-line employees to the service innovation process are associated with the creation of attractive value propositions.
