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Deviant employees and dreadful service encounters: customer tales of discord and distrust

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Deviant employees and dreadful service encounters: customer tales of discord and distrust. / Patterson, Anthony; Baron, Steve; Harris, Lloyd.
In: Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 24, No. 6, 09.2010, p. 438-445.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Patterson A, Baron S, Harris L. Deviant employees and dreadful service encounters: customer tales of discord and distrust. Journal of Services Marketing. 2010 Sept;24(6):438-445. doi: 10.1108/08876041011072555

Author

Patterson, Anthony ; Baron, Steve ; Harris, Lloyd. / Deviant employees and dreadful service encounters : customer tales of discord and distrust. In: Journal of Services Marketing. 2010 ; Vol. 24, No. 6. pp. 438-445.

Bibtex

@article{5a72beee15bf4c65a6aa719663944cd7,
title = "Deviant employees and dreadful service encounters: customer tales of discord and distrust",
abstract = "PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to explore poor service encounters from the customer's perspective.Design/methodology/approachMultiple autoethnographic accounts of overwhelmingly dreadful customer experiences at a department store were gathered and analyzed. The writers of the accounts were asked only to chronicle their experiences, and not directed to comment specifically on retail employee behaviour. Thus a different approach to dysfunctional service employee behaviour is offered to complement research on service sabotage, internal marketing and service delivery gaps.FindingsDepartment store customers, especially the younger ones, have very low opinions of retail frontline employees. Common to all the autoethnographic accounts was a cynicism towards the actions of such employees that pervaded the customer perceptions of retail service encounters. Overcoming customer cynicism was identified as a key objective of employee training.Research implications/limitationsThe approach, based on multiple autoethnographic accounts, provides insights that can be overlooked with traditional customer satisfaction surveys. It is particularly useful for eliciting constructive feelings of experiences. By its nature, it can be difficult for researchers to forecast the ground that may be covered by the scribes, and therefore to plan a research project around the method.Practical implicationsThe findings are relevant to those involved in training retail frontline employees. They strongly suggest that training, through functional scripts and handy customer service tips, is inappropriate for creating successful service encounters with cynical customers, and may even encourage service sabotage behaviours from severely bored employees.Originality/valueThe methodology is novel in the context of retail customer experiences. The findings bring customer cynicism to the fore, and question the viability of continuing with retail formats that require monotonous and uninspiring roles to be played by retail employees.",
author = "Anthony Patterson and Steve Baron and Lloyd Harris",
year = "2010",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1108/08876041011072555",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "438--445",
journal = "Journal of Services Marketing",
issn = "0887-6045",
publisher = "Emerald",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Deviant employees and dreadful service encounters

T2 - customer tales of discord and distrust

AU - Patterson, Anthony

AU - Baron, Steve

AU - Harris, Lloyd

PY - 2010/9

Y1 - 2010/9

N2 - PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to explore poor service encounters from the customer's perspective.Design/methodology/approachMultiple autoethnographic accounts of overwhelmingly dreadful customer experiences at a department store were gathered and analyzed. The writers of the accounts were asked only to chronicle their experiences, and not directed to comment specifically on retail employee behaviour. Thus a different approach to dysfunctional service employee behaviour is offered to complement research on service sabotage, internal marketing and service delivery gaps.FindingsDepartment store customers, especially the younger ones, have very low opinions of retail frontline employees. Common to all the autoethnographic accounts was a cynicism towards the actions of such employees that pervaded the customer perceptions of retail service encounters. Overcoming customer cynicism was identified as a key objective of employee training.Research implications/limitationsThe approach, based on multiple autoethnographic accounts, provides insights that can be overlooked with traditional customer satisfaction surveys. It is particularly useful for eliciting constructive feelings of experiences. By its nature, it can be difficult for researchers to forecast the ground that may be covered by the scribes, and therefore to plan a research project around the method.Practical implicationsThe findings are relevant to those involved in training retail frontline employees. They strongly suggest that training, through functional scripts and handy customer service tips, is inappropriate for creating successful service encounters with cynical customers, and may even encourage service sabotage behaviours from severely bored employees.Originality/valueThe methodology is novel in the context of retail customer experiences. The findings bring customer cynicism to the fore, and question the viability of continuing with retail formats that require monotonous and uninspiring roles to be played by retail employees.

AB - PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to explore poor service encounters from the customer's perspective.Design/methodology/approachMultiple autoethnographic accounts of overwhelmingly dreadful customer experiences at a department store were gathered and analyzed. The writers of the accounts were asked only to chronicle their experiences, and not directed to comment specifically on retail employee behaviour. Thus a different approach to dysfunctional service employee behaviour is offered to complement research on service sabotage, internal marketing and service delivery gaps.FindingsDepartment store customers, especially the younger ones, have very low opinions of retail frontline employees. Common to all the autoethnographic accounts was a cynicism towards the actions of such employees that pervaded the customer perceptions of retail service encounters. Overcoming customer cynicism was identified as a key objective of employee training.Research implications/limitationsThe approach, based on multiple autoethnographic accounts, provides insights that can be overlooked with traditional customer satisfaction surveys. It is particularly useful for eliciting constructive feelings of experiences. By its nature, it can be difficult for researchers to forecast the ground that may be covered by the scribes, and therefore to plan a research project around the method.Practical implicationsThe findings are relevant to those involved in training retail frontline employees. They strongly suggest that training, through functional scripts and handy customer service tips, is inappropriate for creating successful service encounters with cynical customers, and may even encourage service sabotage behaviours from severely bored employees.Originality/valueThe methodology is novel in the context of retail customer experiences. The findings bring customer cynicism to the fore, and question the viability of continuing with retail formats that require monotonous and uninspiring roles to be played by retail employees.

U2 - 10.1108/08876041011072555

DO - 10.1108/08876041011072555

M3 - Journal article

VL - 24

SP - 438

EP - 445

JO - Journal of Services Marketing

JF - Journal of Services Marketing

SN - 0887-6045

IS - 6

ER -