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Customer orientation,engagement, and developing positive emotional labor
Authors:Jay Jaewon Yoo  Todd J Arnold
Institution:1. Department of Entrepreneurialship and Small Business, Soongsil University, Seoul, South Koreayjw1774@ssu.ac.kr;3. Department of Marketing, Spears School of Business, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA
Abstract:Frontline employees must deal on a daily basis with emotionally demanding customer interactions. Such interactions, when coupled with organizational directives to focus upon exemplary customer service, can prompt employees to express feelings and emotions that are not genuine. Such ‘surface acting' has been found to create stress in frontline personnel, but an understanding of how this negative aspect of emotional labor may be minimized is lacking in the services literature. How a frontline employee's individual attributes might interact with a service work context to build deep, as opposed to surface, acting is the current focus. Applying job demands–resources theory, this study investigates how a frontline employee's customer orientation helps to develop positive work engagement, even in the face of contextual demands. Engagement is then linked positively to the beneficial behavior of deep acting which, in contrast to surface acting, has been identified as a less stressful form of emotional labor.
Keywords:emotional labor  job engagement  job demands-resources  customer orientation  performance goal
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