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Enhancing frontline employee support during a product-harm crisis: Evidence and strategic managerial implications for firms
Affiliation:1. The University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, Wisconsin, 54311, USA;2. Rawls College of Business, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, 79409-2101, USA;3. Owen Graduate School of Management, Vanderbilt University, 401 21st Avenue South, Nashville, TN, 37205, USA;1. College of Information and Electrical Engineering, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China;2. Key Laboratory of Agricultural Informationization Standardization, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Beijing, China;1. School of Management, Sabanci University, Orhanli-Tuzla, Istanbul, Turkey;2. Koç University Rumeli Feneri Yolu, Sariyer, Istanbul, Turkey;3. School of Management, Sabanci UniversityOrhanli-Tuzla, 34956, Istanbul, Turkey
Abstract:Product-harm crises can negatively affect a firm's corporate image, reputation, and credibility. This research investigates antecedents and factors that can impact the extent to which frontline employees will be supportive of their organization when the firm faces such a crisis. Leveraging social exchange theory and its focus on reciprocal exchanges, we theorize and test processes using regression models, which shed light on how managers can solicit employee support during crises situations by providing the frontline employees with ethical and supportive working conditions. To offer convergent validity across multiple methodologies, we also test the influence of experimental effects of the relative severity of a crisis and whether a firm was quick or slow in its response on frontline employee support. Furthermore, our research demonstrates that the firm's strengths in corporate social responsibility, the employees' organizational citizenship behavior, and employee organizational identification serially mediate the supportive relationship, which provides a unique contribution to the marketing literature. Finally, we provide managerial implications to further enhance frontline employee support.
Keywords:Frontline employees  Product-harm crisis  Retail implications  Social exchange theory  Corporate social responsibility  Organizational citizenship behavior
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