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A meta-analysis of the impact of customer mistreatment on service employees' affective, attitudinal and behavioral outcomes

Yu Wu (Newcastle Business School, College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Australia)
Markus Groth (School of Management and Governance, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, Australia)
Kaixin Zhang (School of Management and Governance, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, Australia)
Amirali Minbashian (School of Management and Governance, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, Australia)

Journal of Service Management

ISSN: 1757-5818

Article publication date: 5 September 2023

Issue publication date: 1 December 2023

1032

Abstract

Purpose

Although service researchers have long suggested that customer mistreatment adversely impacts service employees' outcomes, statistical integration of current empirical findings has been lacking. This meta-analysis aims to review and statistically synthesize the state of research on the relationship between customer mistreatment and service employees' affective, attitudinal and behavioral outcomes.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors included 221 effect sizes of 135 independent samples from 119 primary studies (N = 47,964). The authors used a meta-analytic approach to quantitatively review the relationship between customer mistreatment and service employees' affective, attitudinal and behavioral outcomes. Meta-analysis structural equation modeling was used to explore the mediation mechanism of service employees' affective outcomes on the relationships between customer mistreatment and employees' attitudinal and behavioral outcomes. Meta-regression was applied to explore the impact of contextual-level moderators (i.e. service provider type and service delivery mode) on these relationships. Furthermore, we compared the effects of customer mistreatment with the effects of other organizational-related factors on some commonly measured employee outcomes.

Findings

The results show that customer mistreatment has a significant negative impact on service employees' affective outcomes (i.e. negative emotions), attitudinal outcomes (i.e. job satisfaction, organizational commitment, work engagement and turnover intention) and behavioral outcomes (i.e. job performance, surface acting and emotional labor). Additionally, service employees' negative emotions mediate the association between customer mistreatment and employees' job satisfaction, turnover intention, surface acting and emotional labor. Furthermore, the relationships between customer mistreatment and service employees' negative emotions and job performance are influenced by a contextual-level moderator (i.e. service delivery mode).

Originality/value

The authors contribute to the literature by providing robust meta-analytic estimates of the effects of customer mistreatment on a variety of service employees' affective, attitudinal and behavioral outcomes, as well as the different magnitudes of the effect sizes between customer mistreatment and other job-related and personality-related factors by quantifying the true variability of the effect sizes. The authors draw on current theories underpinning customer mistreatment to test a theoretical model of the mediation mechanism of service employees' affective outcomes (i.e. service employees' negative emotions) on the relationships between customer mistreatment and employees' attitudinal and behavioral outcomes. The authors explore the effects of two contextual-level factors (i.e. service provider types and service delivery mode) related to the service delivery context that may account for the variability of effect sizes across empirical studies.

Keywords

Citation

Wu, Y., Groth, M., Zhang, K. and Minbashian, A. (2023), "A meta-analysis of the impact of customer mistreatment on service employees' affective, attitudinal and behavioral outcomes", Journal of Service Management, Vol. 34 No. 5, pp. 896-940. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOSM-08-2022-0262

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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