Internal Benefits of Service-Worker Customer Orientation: Job Satisfaction, Commitment, and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors
Kansas State University · College of Business Administration
Abstract
Implementation of the marketing concept in service firms is accomplished through individual service employees and their interactions with customers. Although prior research has established a link between service-worker customer orientation and performance outcomes, little research has addressed other potentially important outcomes of customer orientation. Drawing from the literature on person–situation interaction and fit theory, the authors develop and test a model that explains how service-worker customer orientation affects several important job responses, including perceived job fit, job satisfaction, commitment to the firm, and organizational citizenship behaviors. Across three field studies in two…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 18.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 95
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Business
- Organizational citizenship behavior
- Marketing
- Job satisfaction
- Organizational commitment
- Service (business)
- Customer orientation
- Customer satisfaction
- Decent work and economic growth