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To be engaged or not to be engaged: The antecedents and consequences of service employee engagement
Authors:Bulent Menguc  Seigyoung Auh  Michelle Fisher  Abeer Haddad
Affiliation:1. Brock University, Faculty of Business, Department of Marketing, Int''l Business, and Strategy, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada L2S3A1;2. Thunderbird School of Global Management, 1 Global Place, Glendale, AZ 85306, USA
Abstract:Drawing on the Job Demand-Resource (JD-R) model, this study explores the antecedents and consequences of service employee engagement. The model examines the main effect of resources (autonomy, feedback, and support) on engagement and how the interaction among resources impacts engagement. Further, the model also examines the mediating role of engagement in linking resources to customers' perceived level of service employee performance. The study uses multi-level modeling on data from 482 service employees and customers in 66 retail stores. Results suggest that supervisory feedback is positively related to engagement while supervisory support is not. More engagement is related to more positive service employee performance. Regarding the interactions, supervisory support had a positive effect while supervisory feedback had a negative effect on engagement at high levels of perceived autonomy. Also, engagement was a full mediator between supervisory feedback and service employee performance. Implications for retail service management are discussed.
Keywords:Employee engagement   Job Demand-Resources (JD-R) model   Supervisory support   Supervisory feedback   Perceived autonomy   Service employee performance
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