Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.elizadeuniversity.edu.ng/jspui/handle/20.500.12398/350
Title: An Organisational Study on the Effects of Intrinsic Customer Service Demands: A Perspective from Emotional Labour Theory
Authors: Akanji, Babatunde
Keywords: Emotional labour
Call-centres outlets
Nigeria
Non-Western context
Telephone agents
Issue Date: 1-Aug-2016
Publisher: De Gruyter Open
Citation: Babatunde, A. (2016). An Organisational Study on the Effects of Intrinsic Customer Service Demands: A Perspective from Emotional Labour Theory. Studies in Business and Economics, 11(2), 5-18.
Abstract: The purpose of this research is to examine employees’ views on adverse consequences caused by strict compliance to display rules of intrinsic labour demands as against its appropriate necessities within a call centre context. Using an interpretative phenomenological methodology for the study analysis, 25 semi-structured interviews were conducted with telephone agents working in a call centre outlet in Lagos state, Nigeria. Based on the emotional labour theory, enquires were made about general outcomes experienced from conforming to organisational rules of emotional management during customer service encounters. Findings confirmed that the adversarial impact of affective conformity tends to threaten the positive intentions of these mandatory components of service work. Thus, a proposed theoretical model emerged from the study’s interpretive accounts Based on these significant research findings, detailed practical implications were discussed on ways in which call centre businesses operating in a non-Western context can extenuate poor affective deliveries arising from mismanagement of emotional labour.
URI: 10.1515/sbe-2016-0016
http://repository.elizadeuniversity.edu.ng/jspui/handle/20.500.12398/350
Appears in Collections:Research Articles



Items in EUSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.