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Emotional intelligence in front-line/back-office employee relationships

Treasa Kearney (Department of Marketing, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK)
Gianfranco Walsh (Department of General Management and Marketing, University of Jena, Jena, Germany)
Willy Barnett (Alliance Business School, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK)
Taeshik Gong (College of Business and Economics, Hanyang University ERICA, Ansan)
Maria Schwabe (Department of Marketing, Friedrich-Schiller-Universitat Jena, Jena, Germany)
Kemefasu Ifie (Department of Marketing, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK)

Journal of Services Marketing

ISSN: 0887-6045

Article publication date: 10 April 2017

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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

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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