When job dissatisfaction leads to customer-oriented citizenship behaviors


Autoria(s): Boichuk, Jeffrey, P.
Contribuinte(s)

Faculty of Business Programs

Data(s)

25/10/2010

25/10/2010

25/10/2010

Resumo

This thesis places boundary conditions on the withdrawal model in the frontline setting of service organizations by considering continuance commitment and supervisory support as moderators of the relationship between job dissatisfaction and customer-oriented citizenship behaviors (COCBs). Departing from traditional research in the areas of the service-profit chain and employee withdrawal, the author advances our understanding of conditions that may lead frontline service employees who are dissatisfied to deposit COCBs into the organizational system. Specifically, based on principles derived from social exchange theory, high continuance commitment and high supervisory support are expected to lead to COCBs, because under this condition the benefits of performing such behaviors are increased (i.e., promotion-based, reciprocity-based), while the costs are decreased (i.e., opportunity costs). Utilizing a sample of 127 frontline employees from both the financial services and travel agency industries, the hypothesized relationships are empirically supported using moderated hierarchical regression analysis. To conclude discussion, implications of the results for both academics and p

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/3030

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Brock University

Palavras-Chave #Job satisfaction #Service industries workers #Consumer behavior
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation