Paper Type
Research-in-Progress Paper
Description
More and more companies allow users to bring their own IT devices to the workplace. As a result, an increased heterogeneity of hard- and software makes it challenging to deliver central IT support. Therefore, employees might increasingly rely on the help of their colleagus. In such a user-to-user support scenario, traditional communication media such as text chat and telephone are used. In this context, we set out to investigate the effects of social presence, i.e. the feeling of human warmth, in a laboratory experiment. While this feeling of human contact is assumed to be important in an increasingly digitized world, our findings could not confirm this hypothesis. In contrast to the media richness theory, our study shows that audio compared to text chat has no impact on social presence and no subsequnt effect on trust. However, we could confirm the relationship of social presence on enjoyment and show that trust leads facilitates information gathering. Our findings may be limited du to the use of an answer script of the human support playing a colleagu as counterpart for the participants. We relate our shortcomings to theory and provide potential avenus for future experimental studies on user-to-user support.
THE INFLUENCE OF SOCIAL PRESENCE ON USER-TO-USER SUPPORT PROCEDURES
More and more companies allow users to bring their own IT devices to the workplace. As a result, an increased heterogeneity of hard- and software makes it challenging to deliver central IT support. Therefore, employees might increasingly rely on the help of their colleagus. In such a user-to-user support scenario, traditional communication media such as text chat and telephone are used. In this context, we set out to investigate the effects of social presence, i.e. the feeling of human warmth, in a laboratory experiment. While this feeling of human contact is assumed to be important in an increasingly digitized world, our findings could not confirm this hypothesis. In contrast to the media richness theory, our study shows that audio compared to text chat has no impact on social presence and no subsequnt effect on trust. However, we could confirm the relationship of social presence on enjoyment and show that trust leads facilitates information gathering. Our findings may be limited du to the use of an answer script of the human support playing a colleagu as counterpart for the participants. We relate our shortcomings to theory and provide potential avenus for future experimental studies on user-to-user support.