Balancing Frontliners’ Customer- and Coworker-Directed Behaviors When Serving Business Customers
Author(s) -
van der Borgh Michel,
de Jong Ad,
Nijssen Edwin J.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of service research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.434
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1552-7379
pISSN - 1094-6705
DOI - 10.1177/1094670519835313
Subject(s) - business , marketing , customer retention , incentive , customer to customer , customer advocacy , service (business) , product (mathematics) , service quality , economics , microeconomics , geometry , mathematics
In this digital era, where many product-oriented business-to-business companies are shifting to a product-service systems approach, frontline employees (FLEs) are urged to complement customer-directed behaviors with coworker-directed prosocial behaviors to achieve optimal performance. Surprisingly, little is known about the relationship between FLEs’ coworker-directed and customer-directed behaviors in product-service systems settings. This research addresses this void and serves two purposes. First, drawing on role balance theory, the authors develop and test a model of an FLE’s relative emphasis on serving coworkers (i.e., helping) relative to the emphasis on serving business customers (i.e., proactive selling) as well as the antecedents and consequences of customer-coworker (im)balance. Second, the authors propose that managers can influence antecedents and consequences through an incentive system and access to information sources, respectively. Multivariate time-lagged analyses using survey and secondary performance data reveal that customer-coworker balance is beneficial for an FLE’s performance, especially when leveraging their coworkers as a prime information source. Interestingly, the increasingly damaging impact of an imbalance toward customer-directed behaviors can be countered by using the information technology (IT) system. Also of interest is that managers can correct imbalance—caused by either work group identification or expected customer demand—via individual-based incentives.
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