Developing a multidimensional scale of customer-oriented deviance (COD)


Autoria(s): Leo, Cheryl; Russell-Bennett, Rebekah
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Although frontline employees' bending of organizational rules and norms for customers is an important phenomenon, marketing scholars to date only broadly describe over-servicing behaviors and provide little distinction among deviant behavioral concepts. Drawing on research on pro-social and pro-customer behaviors and on studies of positive deviance, this paper develops and validates a multi-faceted, multi-dimensional construct term customer-oriented deviance. Results from two samples totaling 616 frontline employees (FLEs) in the retail and hospitality industries demonstrate that customer-oriented deviance is a four-dimensional construct with sound psychometric properties. Evidence from a test of a theoretical model of key antecedents establishes nomological validity with empathy/perspective-taking, risk-taking propensity, role conflict, and job autonomy as key predictors. Results show that the dimensions of customer-oriented deviance are distinct and have significant implications for theory and practice.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/72855/

Publicador

Elsevier Inc.

Relação

DOI:10.1016/j.jbusres.2013.04.009

Leo, Cheryl & Russell-Bennett, Rebekah (2014) Developing a multidimensional scale of customer-oriented deviance (COD). Journal of Business Research, 67(6), pp. 1218-1225.

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Advertising, Marketing & Public Relations

Palavras-Chave #150501 Consumer-Oriented Product or Service Development #Frontline Employees #Over-servicing #Positive Deviance #Service Encounters
Tipo

Journal Article