Abstract
The customer incivility literature has primarily focused on emotional exhaustion and burnout as emotion-focused mediators that channel the effect of customer incivility. Drawing on conservation of resources (COR) theory, the current research proposes a new problem-solving-focused mediator, namely, conflict-solving behavior. The authors test the mediating role of conflict-solving behavior between customer incivility and customer service performance while controlling for emotional exhaustion and employee incivility as parallel mediation mechanisms. The results from three studies provide strong support for a negative relationship between customer incivility and conflict-solving behavior and for conflict-solving behavior as a full mediator between customer incivility and customer service performance. Furthermore, the negative effect of customer incivility on conflict-solving behavior is mitigated when customer service employees are promotion-focused and as investment in customer relationship building increases. The findings extend the scope and generalizability of customer incivility research from the business-to-customer to the business-to-business context. Managerial implications for employee training and hiring as well as the importance of cultivating customer relationships as a buffer to dampen the effect of customer incivility are discussed.
Translated title of the contribution | Conflict-solving as a mediator between customer incivility and service performance |
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Original language | Chinese (Traditional) |
Journal | Service Industries Journal |
DOIs | |
State | Accepted/In press - 2022 |
Keywords
- Customer incivility
- conflict solving
- conservation of resources
- customer relationship
- regulatory focus theory
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Strategy and Management
- Management of Technology and Innovation