Emotional intelligence in front-line/back-office employee relationships
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to undertake a simultaneous assessment of interdependence in the behaviours of front-line and back-office employees and their joint effect on customer-related organisational performance. It also tests for a moderating influence of the emotional intelligence of front-line salespeople and back-office employees.
Design/methodology/approach
The sample comprises 105 front-line sales employees and 77 back-office employees. The customer-related organisational performance data come from a UK business-to-business (B2B) electronics company. With these triadic data, this study uses partial least squares to estimate the measurement and structural models.
Findings
Salespeople’s customer orientation directly affects customer-related organisational performance; the relationship is moderated by salespeople’s emotional intelligence. The emotional intelligence of salespeople also directly affects the customer-directed citizenship behaviour of back-office employees. Furthermore, the emotional intelligence of back-office staff moderates the link between the emotional intelligence of salespeople and back-office staff citizenship behaviour. Back-office staff citizenship behaviour, in turn, affects customer-related organisational performance.
Originality/value
The emotions deployed by employees in interactions with customers clearly shape customers’ perceptions of service quality, as well as employee-level performance outcomes. However, prior literature lacks insights into the simultaneous effects of front-line and back-office employee behaviour, especially in B2B settings. This paper addresses these research gaps by investigating triadic relationships – among back-office employees, front-line employees and customer outcomes – in a B2B setting, where they are of particular managerial interest.
Keywords
Citation
Kearney, T., Walsh, G., Barnett, W., Gong, T., Schwabe, M. and Ifie, K. (2017), "Emotional intelligence in front-line/back-office employee relationships", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 31 No. 2, pp. 185-199. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSM-09-2016-0339
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited