Domestic inter‐cultural service encounters: an integrated model
Managing Service Quality: An International Journal
ISSN: 0960-4529
Article publication date: 1 August 2005
Abstract
Purpose
Proposes to provide practicing managers and academic researchers with a framework that will help them to understand better the nature of domestic inter‐cultural service encounters.
Design/methodology/approach
Social identity theory is used to demonstrate how salient identity cues such as physiognomy, linguistic, and behavioral differences are likely to influence customer expectations during initial and subsequent encounters between domestic customers and culturally distant service providers.
Findings
The framework developed, and the associated propositions, provide practicing managers with insights into how domestic service customers are likely to respond to domestic inter‐cultural service encounters.
Practical implications
Domestic intercultural service encounters have special practical implications for staffing policy and training requirements in service organizations (e.g. there may be ethical and legal challenges for service organizations that refuse to hire service providers unless they can demonstrate competence in the domestic language, customs, etc., or because of visible salient cultural identity cues).
Originality/value
Existing service encounter frameworks do not address the role that cultural identity plays in service exchange relationships. The value of this paper is that it uses cultural identity theory to extend an existing model that examines the nature and determinants of customer expectations of service. This extension enhances managers' understanding of service exchange relationships.
Keywords
Citation
Hopkins, S.A., Hopkins, W.E. and Hoffman, K.D. (2005), "Domestic inter‐cultural service encounters: an integrated model", Managing Service Quality: An International Journal, Vol. 15 No. 4, pp. 329-343. https://doi.org/10.1108/09604520510606817
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited