4.5 Article

A self-verification perspective on customer mistreatment and customer-directed organizational citizenship behaviors

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 43, Issue 5, Pages 912-931

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/job.2610

Keywords

customer mistreatment; customer appreciation; OCB-customer; self-esteem; self-verification; workplace aggression

Funding

  1. Prime Minister's Australia Asia Fellowship

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This study extends the research on the relationship between customer mistreatment and customer-directed organizational citizenship behaviors (OCB-Cs) by examining the mechanisms of self-verification and the boundary conditions of self-esteem and entity customer appreciation. The findings reveal that customer mistreatment leads employees to feel less self-verified, especially among those with higher self-esteem. These employees are more likely to withhold OCB-Cs, particularly when they perceive lower levels of entity customer appreciation. Overall, these results deepen our understanding of how employees experience and react to customer mistreatment depending on their self-concept and perception of customers.
Customer mistreatment events play a major role in employees' subsequent customer service behaviors, and is believed to have implications for employees' sense of self. We extend this line of research by developing a self-verification account of the relationship between customer mistreatment and customer-directed OCBs (OCB-Cs) by examining theoretically prescribed novel mechanisms (i.e., self-verification) and boundary conditions (i.e., self-esteem and entity customer appreciation) for this relationship. We conducted a programmatic series of studies using daily diary (Study 1), audio vignette (Study 2), and behavioral experiment (Study 3) designs to test the proposed model. The overall pattern of results showed that customer mistreatment led employees to feel less self-verified, especially among those with higher trait self-esteem. These employees in turn were more likely to withhold OCB-Cs, especially among those perceiving lower levels of entity customer appreciation. Overall, these results deepen our understanding of the role of the self-concept in how employees experience and react to customer mistreatment--depending on how employees see themselves and how they see their customers in general.

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