DOI QR코드

DOI QR Code

Internal Service Recovery's Influence on Frontline Service Employees' Satisfaction and Loyalty

  • Gong, Taeshik (Division of Business Administration, College of Business and Economics, Hanyang University ERICA)
  • 투고 : 2015.01.07
  • 심사 : 2015.07.06
  • 발행 : 2015.07.31

초록

Relatively little studies have investigated employee recovery from internal service failure, especially from the employees' perspective. When handling customer complaints, employees must not only deal with legitimate customer demands after a service failure, such as providing an apology, rectifying the problem, and offering compensation, but they must also manage illegitimate dysfunctional customers, who may yell, threaten, and even physically harm the employee. These negative experiences can have strong effects, and employees can exhibit higher levels of stress such as burnout and emotional labor, which have been linked to dissatisfaction, tension and anxiety, reduced performance and effectiveness, and a greater propensity to leave the firm, ultimately leading to negative financial consequences for the firm. These conditions result in internal service failure and create the need to recover employees-in other words, internal service recovery. However, little research has examined this issue so far. The purpose of the current study, therefore, is to investigate the relationship between internal service recovery and employee outcomes. A pre-test, post-test between-subjects experimental design was developed. Participants were 166 part-time students who were working full-time. The average age of the participants was 36.74 years, and 57.50% of them were female. The average length of employment was 13 years. Participants were randomly assigned to one of four groups of approximately equal size. Three of the groups were subjected to an experimental situation involving an internal service failure, while one group was not exposed to failure, thereby acting as a control group. This study contributes to the service marketing literature in several ways. First, the study extends service failure and/or recovery research by examining recovery in an employee context. Second, this study attempts to measure internal service recovery and to empirically demonstrate its relationship to employee outcomes. Third, this investigation emphasizes the managerial importance of internal service recovery. For example, understanding the nature of the relationships between internal service recovery and its consequences can improve the effectiveness and efficiency of managers' resource allocation decisions.

키워드

과제정보

This work was supported by the research fund of Hanyang University (HY-2014-N)

참고문헌

  1. Bell, Chip R. and Ron E. Zemke (1987), "Service Breakdown the Road to Recovery," Management Review, 76 (10), 32-5.
  2. Bell, Simon J. and James A. Luddington (2006), "Coping with Customer Complaints," Journal of Service Research, 8 (3), 221-33.
  3. Ben-Zur, Hasida and Dana Yagil (2005), "The Relationship between Empowerment, Aggressive Behaviours of Customers, Coping, and Burnout," European journal of work and organizational psychology, 14 (1), 81-99.
  4. Berry, Leonard L. (1981), "Perspectives on the Retailing of Services," in Ronald W. Stampfl and Elizabeth C. Hirschman, eds., Theory in Retailing: Traditional and Non-Traditional Sources, Chicago, IL: American Marketing Association, 9-20.
  5. Bitner, Mary Jo, Bernard. H. Booms, and Mary Stanfield Tetreault (1990), "The Service Encounter: Diagnosing Favorable and Unfavorable Incidents," Journal of Marketing, 54 (January), 71-84.
  6. Blodgett, Jeffrey G., Donna J. Hill, and Stephen S. Tax (1997), "The Effects of Distributive, Procedural, and Interactional Justice on Postcomplaint Behavior," Journal of Retailing, 73 (2), 185-210.
  7. Boshoff, Christo and Janine Allen (2000), "The Influence of Selected Antecedents on Frontline Staff's Perceptions of Service Recovery Performance," International Journal of Service Industry Management, 11 (1), 63-90.
  8. Bowen, David E. and Robert Johnston (1999), "Internal Service Recovery: Developing a New Construct," International Journal of Service Industry Management, 10 (2), 118-31.
  9. Chebat, Jean-Charles and Witold Slusarczyk (2005), "How Emotions Mediate the Effects of Perceived Justice on Loyalty in Service Recovery Situations: An Empirical Study," Journal of Business Research, 58 (5), 664-73.
  10. Cohen, Sheldon and Thomas Ashby Wills (1985), "Stress, Social Support, and the Buffering Hypothesis," Psychological Bulletin, 98 (2), 310-57.
  11. Dallimore, Karen S., Beverley A. Sparks, and Ken Butcher (2007), "The Influence of Angry Customer Outbursts on Service Providers' Facial Displays and Affective States," Journal of Service Research, 10 (1), 78-92.
  12. Daunt, Kate L. and Lloyd C. Harris (2011), "Customers Acting Badly: Evidence from the Hospitality Industry," Journal of Business Research, 64 (10), 1034-42.
  13. de Ruyter, Ko, Martin Wetzels, and Richard Feinberg (2001), "Role Stress in Call Centers: Its Effects on Employee Performance and Satisfaction," Journal of Interactive Marketing, 15 (2), 23-35.
  14. Dong, Beibei, Kenneth R. Evans, and Shaoming Zou (2008), "The Effects of Customer Participation in Co-Created Service Recovery," Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 36 (1), 123-37.
  15. Dormann, Christian and Dieter Zapf (2004), "Customer-Related Social Stressors and Burnout," Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 9 (1), 61-82.
  16. Gao, Liping. Onne Janssen, and Kan Shi (2011), "Leader Trust and Employee Voice: The Moderating Role of Empowering Leader Behaviors," Leadership Quarterly, 22 (4), 787-98.
  17. Gregoire, Yany, Thomas M. Tripp, and Renaud Legoux (2009), "When Customer Love Turns into Lasting Hate:The Effects of Relationship Strength and Time on Customer Revenge and Avoidance," Journal of Marketing, 73 (November), 18-32.
  18. Grandey, Alicia A., David N. Dickter, and Hock-Peng Sin (2004), "The Customer Is Not Always Right: Customer Aggression and Emotion Regulation of Service Employees," Journal of Organizational Behavior, 25 (3), 397-418.
  19. Grandey, Alicia A., Julie H. Kern, and Michael R. Frone (2007), "Verbal Abuse from Outsiders Versus Insiders: Comparing Frequency, Impact on Emotional Exhaustion, and the Role of Emotional Labor," Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 12 (1), 63-79.
  20. Greenberg, Jerald (2006), "Losing Sleep over Organizational Injustice: Attenuating Insomniac Reactions to Underpayment Inequity with Supervisory Training in Interactional Justice," Journal of Applied Psychology, 91 (1), 58-69.
  21. Gronroos, Christian (1981), "Internal Marketing - An Integral Part of Marketing Theory," in James H. Donnelly and William R. George, eds., Marketing of Services, Chicago, IL: American Marketing Association, 236-38.
  22. Harris, Lloyd C. and Kate L. Reynolds (2003), "The Consequences of Dysfunctional Customer Behavior," Journal of Service Research, 6 (2), 144-61.
  23. Hoffman, K. Douglas, Scott W. Kelley, and Holly M. Rotalsky (1995), "Tracking Service Failures and Employee Recovery Efforts," Journal of Services Marketing, 9 (2), 49-61.
  24. Homburg, Christian and Andreas Furst (2005), "How Organizational Complaint Handling Drives Customer Loyalty: An Analysis of the Mechanistic and the Organic Approach," Journal of Marketing, 69 (July), 95-114.
  25. Homburg, Christian and Ruth M. Stock (2004), "The Link between Salesperson's Job Satisfaction and Customer Satisfaction in a Business-to-Business Context: A Dyadic Analysis," Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 32 (2), 144-58.
  26. House, J. S. (1981), Work Stress and Social Support. MA: Addison Wesley.
  27. Jackson, Susan E. (1983), "Participation in Decision Making as a Strategy for Reducing Job-Related Strain," Journal of Applied Psychology, 68 (1), 3-19.
  28. Karasek, Robert A. (1979), "Job Demands, Job Decision Latitude, and Mental Strain: Implications for Job Redesign," Administrative Science Quarterly, 24 (2), 285-308.
  29. Kong, Feng, Jingjing Zhao, Xuqun You (2012), "Emotional Intelligence and Life Satisfaction in Chinese University Students: The Mediating Role of Self-Esteem and Social Support," Personality and Individual Differences, 53 (8), 1039-43
  30. Kelley, Scott W., K. Douglas Hoffman, and Mark A. Davis (1993), "A Typology of Retail Failures and Recoveries," Journal of Retailing, 69 (4), 429-452.
  31. Lewin, Jeffrey E. and Jeffrey K. Sager (2008), "Salesperson Burnout: A Test of the Coping-Mediational Model of Social Support," Journal of Personal Selling and Sales Management, 28 (3), 233-46.
  32. Liao, Hui (2007), "Do It Right This Time: The Role of Employee Service Recovery Performance in Customer-Perceived Justice and Customer Loyalty after Service Failures," Journal of Applied Psychology, 92 (2), 475-89.
  33. Maxham III, James G. (2001), "Service Recovery's Influence on Consumer Satisfaction, Positive Word-of-Mouth, and Purchase Intentions," Journal of Business Research, 54 (1), 11-24.
  34. Maxham III, James G. and Richard G. Netemeyer (2003), "Firms Reap What They Sow: The Effects of Shared Values and Perceived Organizational Justice on Customers' Evaluations of Complaint Handling," Journal of Marketing, 67 (January), 46-62.
  35. Maxham III, James G. and Richard G. Netemeyer (2002), "Modeling Customer Perceptions of Complaint Handling over Time: The Effects of Perceived Justice on Satisfaction and Intent," Journal of Retailing, 78 (4), 239-52.
  36. McColl-Kennedy, Janet R., Paul G. Patterson, Amy K. Smith, and Michael K. Brady (2009), "Customer Rage Episodes: Emotions, Expressions and Behaviors," Journal of Retailing, 85 (2), 222-37.
  37. Michel, Stefan, David E. Bowen, and Robert Johnston (2009), "Why Service Recovery Fails: Tensions among Customer, Employee, and Process Perspectives," Journal of Service Management, 20 (3), 253-73.
  38. Miller, Katherine I. and Peter R. Monge (1986), "Participation, Satisfaction, and Productivity: A Meta-Analytic Review," Academy of Management Journal, 29 (4), 727-53.
  39. Niehoff, Brian P., Robert H. Moorman, Gerald Blakely, and Jack Fuller (2001), "The Influence of Empowerment and Job Enrichment on Employee Loyalty in a Downsizing Environment," Group & Organization Management, 26 (1), 93-113.
  40. Pereira, Gloria M. and H. G. Osburn (2007), "Effects of Participation in Decision Making on Performance and Employee Attitudes: A Quality Circles Meta-Analysis," Journal of Business and Psychology, 22 (2), 145-53.
  41. Reynolds, Kate L. and Lloyd C. Harris (2009), "Dysfunctional Customer Behavior Severity: An Empirical Examination," Journal of Retailing, 85 (3). 321-35.
  42. Rich, Gregory A. (1997), "The Sales Manager as a Role Model: Effects on Trust, Job Satisfaction, and Performance of Salespeople," Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 25 (4), 319-28.
  43. Roggeveen, Anne L., Michael Tsiros, and Dhruv Grewal (2011), "Understanding the co-creation effect: when does collaborating with customers provide a lift to service recovery?," Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 40 (6), 771-790.
  44. Rupp, Ddborah E., A Silke McCance, Sharmin Spencer, and Karlheinz Sonntag (2008), "Customer (in) Justice and Emotional Labor: The Role of Perspective Taking, Anger, and Emotional Regulation" Journal of Management, 34 (5), 903-24.
  45. Santos-Vijande, Maria Leticia, Ana Maria Diaz-Martin, Leticia Suarez-Alvarez, and Ana Belen del Rio-Lanza (2013), "An Integrated Service Recovery System (ISRS): Influence on Knowledge-Intensive Business Services Performance," European Journal of Marketing, 47 (5/6), 934-63.
  46. Siegrist, Johannes (1996), "Adverse Health Effects of High-Effort/Low-Reward Conditions," Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 1 (1), 27-41.
  47. Siegrist, Johannes, Dagmar Starke, Tarani Chandola, Isabelle Godin, Michael Marmot, Isabelle Niedhammer, and Richard Peter (2004), "The Measurement of Effort-Reward Imbalance at Work: European Comparisons," Social Science & Medicine, 58 (8), 1483-99.
  48. Smith, Amy K., Ruth N. Bolton, and Janet Wagner (1999), "A Model of Customer Satisfaction with Service Encounters Involving Failure and Recovery," Journal of Marketing, 36 (August), 356-72.
  49. Somech, Anit and Anat Drach-Zahavy (2013), "Organizational Citizenship Behaviour and Employee's Strain: Examining the Buffering Effects of Leader Support and Participation in Decision Making," European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 22 (2), 138-149.
  50. Tax, Stephen S., Stephen W. Brown, and Murali Chandrashekaran (1998), "Customer Evaluations of Service Complaint Experiences: Implications for Relationship Marketing," Journal of Marketing, 62 (April), 60-76.
  51. van Jaarsveld, Danielle D., David D. Walker, and Daniel P. Skarlicki (2010), "The Role of Job Demands and Emotional Exhaustion in the Relationship between Customer and Employee Incivility," Journal of Management, 36 (6), 1486-504.
  52. Wagner, Tillmann, Thorsten Hennig-Thurau, and Thomas Rudolph (2009), "Does Customer Demotion Jeopardize Loyalty?," Journal of Marketing, 73 (3), 69-85.
  53. Yagil, Dana (2006), "The Relationship of Service Provider Power Motivation, Empowerment and Burnout to Customer Satisfaction," International Journal of Service Industry Management, 17 (3), 258-70.
  54. Yagil, Dana (2008), "When the Customer Is Wrong: A Review of Research on Aggression and Sexual Harassment in Service Encounters," Aggression and Violent Behavior, 13 (2), 141-52.
  55. Yi, Youjae and Taeshik Gong (2008a), "The Effects of Customer Justice Perception and Affect on Customer Citizenship Behavior and Customer Dysfunctional Behavior," Industrial Marketing Management 37 (7), 767-83.
  56. Yi, Youjae and Taeshik Gong (2008b), "If Employees 'Go the Extra Mile,' Do Customers Reciprocate with Similar Behavior?," Psychology & Marketing, 25 (10), 961-86.
  57. Zhu, Zhen, Cheryl Nakata, K. Sivakumar, and Dhruv Grewal (2013), "Fix It or Leave It? Customer Recovery from Self-Service Technology Failures," Journal of Retailing, 90 (1), 15-29.