Service workers’ job performance: The roles of personality traits, organizational identification, and customer orientation
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to advance the literature by testing the boundary of this relationship with reference to a key construct in employee performance in the service domain: employee customer orientation. Organizational identification refers to employees’ perceived oneness and belongingness to their work organization, and has been argued to be associated with higher employee performance.
Design/methodology/approach
Data were collected based on a sample of call center service workers. Employees rated their organizational identification, customer orientation and personality traits. Supervisors independently rated their subordinates’ performance. Variables statistic tools were used to analyze the data and test a series of hypotheses.
Findings
It was found that customer orientation strengthens the relationship between organizational identification and service workers’ job performance, and it enhances the mediating effect of organizational identification on the relationship between service workers’ personality trait (i.e. agreeableness) and their performance.
Originality/value
This research advances an argument that employee customer orientation moderates the relationship between employee organizational identification and employee job performance in the call center service provision domain. In addition, this is a pioneering study examining the roles of personality traits on employee organizational identification.
Keywords
Citation
He, H., Wang, W., Zhu, W. and Harris, L. (2015), "Service workers’ job performance: The roles of personality traits, organizational identification, and customer orientation", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 49 No. 11/12, pp. 1751-1776. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-03-2014-0132
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited