TY - JOUR AB - Purpose– Aims to analyse the reactions of front‐line staff to the use of the “customer” label in Jobcentre Plus, the new agency charged with structural and cultural reform of benefit administration in the UK and to highlight some key challenges and possibilities faced by “new public management” reformers in attempts to re‐present recipients of public services as customers.Design/methodology/approach– Data are drawn from semi‐structured interviews with 39 front‐line workers in 14 public offices, conducted as part of the second phase of a study on staff perceptions of the Jobcentre Plus reform.Findings– The majority of those interviewed reported awareness of and agreement with the customer label. More substantive views point to the ambiguous and shifting meanings applied by public sector workers to the customer role per se, and to its complex and multifaceted application to the Jobcentre Plus context.Research limitations/implications– Provides a systematic account of front‐line workers' attitudinal reactions to the incursion of the customer concept. However, the impact on users of the system is a question for further research.Practical implications– Identifies a set of possibilities and challenges inherent in attempts to manage relevant cultural change amongst the front‐line of public service provision.Originality/value– Provides a systematic account of the views of front‐line workers to the customerisation of public service provision, an issue of interest both to researchers and to practitioners. VL - 19 IS - 1 SN - 0951-3558 DO - 10.1108/09513550610640401 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/09513550610640401 AU - Rosenthal Patrice AU - Peccei Riccardo PY - 2006 Y1 - 2006/01/01 TI - The customer concept in welfare administration: front‐line views in Jobcentre Plus T2 - International Journal of Public Sector Management PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 67 EP - 78 Y2 - 2024/09/20 ER -