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Tolerating errors in hospitality organizations: relationships with learning behavior, error reporting and service recovery performance

Xingyu Wang (School of Hotel and Tourism Management, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong)
Priyanko Guchait (Conrad N. Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA)
Aysin Paşamehmetoğlu (Department of Hotel Management, Ozyegin University, Istanbul, Turkey)

International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management

ISSN: 0959-6119

Article publication date: 2 July 2020

Issue publication date: 4 August 2020

1588

Abstract

Purpose

Hospitality work setting is error-prone, rendering error handling critical for effective organizational operation and quality of service delivery. An organization’s attitude toward errors can be traced back to one fundamental question: should errors be tolerated/accepted or not? This study aims to examine the relationships between error tolerance and hospitality employees’ three critical work behaviors, namely, learning behavior, error reporting and service recovery performance. Psychological safety and self-efficacy are hypothesized to be the underlying attitudinal mechanisms that link error tolerance with these behavioral outcomes.

Design/methodology/approach

This study relied on a survey methodology, collecting data from 304 frontline restaurant employees in Turkey and their direct supervisors. SPSS 25.0 and Amos 25.0 were used for analysis.

Findings

The results revealed that error tolerance had direct positive relationships with employees’ psychological safety and self-efficacy, both of which had positive impacts on learning behavior and error reporting. In addition, learning behavior positively influenced employees’ service recovery performance, as rated by the employees’ supervisors.

Originality/value

This study identifies error tolerance as an organizational distal factor that influences employees’ learning behavior, error reporting and service recovery performance; and identifies self-efficacy and psychological safety as mediators of the relationship between error tolerance and behavioral outcomes. The findings help clarify the longstanding debate over the relationship between an organization’s attitude toward errors and its employees’ learning behavior. The findings also shed light on the advantages of tolerating error occurrence for organizations, which is especially important as most hospitality organizations pursue perfection with aversive attitudes toward errors.

Keywords

Citation

Wang, X., Guchait, P. and Paşamehmetoğlu, A. (2020), "Tolerating errors in hospitality organizations: relationships with learning behavior, error reporting and service recovery performance", International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, Vol. 32 No. 8, pp. 2635-2655. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-01-2020-0001

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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