The impact of perceived customer delight on the frontline employee

被引:57
作者
Barnes, Donald C. [1 ]
Ponder, Nicole [2 ]
Hopkins, Christopher D. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Cameron Sch Business, Dept Mkt, Wilmington, NC 28403 USA
[2] Mississippi State Univ, Coll Business, Dept Mkt, Mississippi State, MS 39762 USA
[3] Clemson Univ, Dept Mkt, Coll Business & Behav Sci, Clemson, SC 29634 USA
关键词
Customer delight; Service-profit chain; Customer orientation; Emotional contagion; Broaden-and-build; BOUNDARY-SPANNING BEHAVIORS; SERVICE-PROFIT CHAIN; JOB-SATISFACTION; ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT; EMOTIONAL CONTAGION; POSITIVE EMOTIONS; RECRUITING SOURCE; SOCIAL IDENTITY; PERCEPTIONS; MODEL;
D O I
10.1016/j.jbusres.2014.06.005
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
A plethora of research has investigated the impact of the frontline employee on the customer, with the consensus that employees can have a tremendous impact on the customer. What remains to be discovered is the extent to which this relationship exists in the reverse. Utilizing broaden-and-build and emotional contagion theories, this study suggests that employee perceptions of a specific customer emotion (delight) have an impact on the frontline employee. Specifically, results from a structural equations model reveal that employee perceptions of customer delight lead to employee positive affect, which in turn positively influences commitment and job satisfaction as well as creates stronger external representation behaviors, internal influence behaviors, and service delivery behaviors from the employee. These findings contribute new evidence to the debate of the viability of providing customer delight and extend our knowledge beyond emotional contagion in explaining how positive customer emotions manifest in employees. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:433 / 441
页数:9
相关论文
共 79 条
[1]   STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING IN PRACTICE - A REVIEW AND RECOMMENDED 2-STEP APPROACH [J].
ANDERSON, JC ;
GERBING, DW .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1988, 103 (03) :411-423
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1997, Marketing Management: Analysis, planning, implementation and control
[3]   SOCIAL IDENTITY THEORY AND THE ORGANIZATION [J].
ASHFORTH, BE ;
MAEL, F .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 1989, 14 (01) :20-39
[4]  
Bagozzi R., 1988, J. Acad. Mark. Sci, V16, P74, DOI [10.1007/BF02723327, DOI 10.1007/BF02723327]
[5]   INVESTIGATING THE EMPLOYEE'S PERSPECTIVE OF CUSTOMER DELIGHT [J].
Barnes, Donald ;
Collier, Joel ;
Ponder, Nicole ;
Williams, Zachary .
JOURNAL OF PERSONAL SELLING & SALES MANAGEMENT, 2013, 33 (01) :91-104
[6]   TO DELIGHT, OR NOT TO DELIGHT? THIS IS THE QUESTION SERVICE FIRMS MUST ADDRESS [J].
Barnes, Donald C. ;
Beauchamp, Michelle Bednarz ;
Webster, Cynthia .
JOURNAL OF MARKETING THEORY AND PRACTICE, 2010, 18 (03) :275-283
[7]   Why does affect matter in organizations? [J].
Barsade, Sigal G. ;
Gibson, Donald E. .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVES, 2007, 21 (01) :36-59
[8]   JOB-SATISFACTION AND THE GOOD SOLDIER - THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AFFECT AND EMPLOYEE CITIZENSHIP [J].
BATEMAN, TS ;
ORGAN, DW .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 1983, 26 (04) :587-595
[9]   Role stressors and customer-oriented boundary-spanning behaviors in service organizations [J].
Bettencourt, LA ;
Brown, SW .
JOURNAL OF THE ACADEMY OF MARKETING SCIENCE, 2003, 31 (04) :394-408
[10]   Contact employees: Relationships among workplace fairness, job satisfaction and prosocial service behaviors [J].
Bettencourt, LA ;
Brown, SW .
JOURNAL OF RETAILING, 1997, 73 (01) :39-61