Do Frontline Employees Cope Effectively with Abusive Supervision and Customer Incivility? Testing the Effect of Employee Resilience
Autor: | Shaker Bani-Melhem, Mohd Ahmad Al-Hawari, Samina Quratulain |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Service (business)
ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION Abusive supervision media_common.quotation_subject 05 social sciences Applied psychology 050109 social psychology Interpersonal communication Affect (psychology) General Business Management and Accounting Incivility 0502 economics and business 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Industrial and organizational psychology Psychological resilience Business and International Management Psychology Emotional exhaustion 050203 business & management General Psychology Applied Psychology media_common |
Zdroj: | Journal of Business and Psychology. 35:223-240 |
ISSN: | 1573-353X 0889-3268 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10869-019-09621-2 |
Popis: | This paper examines multiple workplace interpersonal stressors experienced by frontline employees. Drawing upon conservation of resources theory, we propose that abusive supervision and customer incivility positively relate to emotional exhaustion and indirectly affect service performance and the capacity to satisfy customers. The study posits that employee resilience is an individual difference variable that mitigates the impact of interpersonal stressors on emotional exhaustion and buffers the negative effect of emotional exhaustion on service performance and the capacity to satisfy customers. The model is tested on a sample of 192 frontline employees using structural equation modeling. Data were collected from frontline employees working in different service organizations using a time-lagged design, and supervisor-rated employee performance was also measured. The findings show that both abusive supervision and customer incivility are positively related to emotional exhaustion. The effect of customer incivility on emotional exhaustion is mitigated by employee resilience, and the indirect effect of customer incivility on the capacity to satisfy customers is stronger for low-resilience employees. For managers, our findings highlight the importance of controlling multiple interpersonal workplace stressors, and employee resilience represents an important resource that can be exhausted with continued exposure to stressors. Organizations should develop better job designs and improve leadership practices that can help minimize the impact of interpersonal stressors on frontline employees’ performance. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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