Back to Search
Start Over
Achieving service-sales ambidexterity
- Source :
- Journal of Service Research, 16(1), 52-66. SAGE Publications Inc.
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Frontline employees in traditional customer service units are under increasing pressure to pursue the twin goals of providing quality service while achieving productivity gains by meeting increased sales targets—that is, being service-sales ambidextrous. Drawing from literature on organizational ambidexterity, this study explores forces that facilitate the conversion from a service-only environment to one that emphasizes both sales and service behavior. With a sample of more than 2,306 frontline employees in 267 bank branches, this study examines the impact of contextual variables on service-sales ambidexterity from a multilevel perspective. It then explores the consequences by analyzing objective financial data at the retail branch level, which reveal a significant relationship between ambidexterity and financial performance. Empowerment and transformational leadership are positively associated with service-sales ambidexterity at individual and branch levels; team support is associated with ambidexterity only at the individual employee level. Managers thus should let service workers exercise their own judgment when deciding when or what to up- or cross-sell. The delegation of authority works best for branch office veterans whose service excellence and selling both are recognized and rewarded.
- Subjects :
- HIERARCHICAL LINEAR-MODELS
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Sociology and Political Science
media_common.quotation_subject
EMPOWERMENT
TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP
service-sales ambidexterity
team support
EMPIRICAL-TEST
Empirical research
Marketing
Empowerment
Productivity
Ambidexterity
media_common
Service quality
CONSEQUENCES
business.industry
hierarchical linear modeling
Public relations
MEDIATING ROLE
PERFORMANCE
Transformational leadership
Service (economics)
ORGANIZATIONAL AMBIDEXTERITY
Customer satisfaction
Business
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
MULTILEVEL RESEARCH
Information Systems
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 10946705
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Service Research, 16(1), 52-66. SAGE Publications Inc.
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....758a636749dd0286b3563aa43bb13567