Service-oriented high-performance work practices as predictors of retail employees’ work engagement and service climate perceptions

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Authors

Kotze, Theuns G.
Mostert, P.G. (Pierre)

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge

Abstract

Using survey data collected from 781 frontline employees of a South African retailer, this study investigated the degree to which employees’ perceptions of six service-oriented high-performance work practices (HPWPs) – staffing, training, financial compensation, non-financial rewards, involvement, and empowerment – predict their work engagement and service climate perceptions. It was found that employees’ perceptions of involvement, training and staffing predicted their service climate perceptions, while only training was a statistically significant predictor of employees’ work engagement. The study contributes to the limited research on the relationship between individual service-oriented HPWPs and these two crucial employee outcomes.

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Keywords

Service-oriented high-performance work practices (HPWPs), Service climate, Work engagement, Retailing

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Theuns Kotzé & Pierre Mostert (2021) Service-Oriented High-Performance Work Practices as Predictors of Retail Employees’ Work Engagement and Service Climate Perceptions, Services Marketing Quarterly, 42:1-2, 1-19, DOI: 10.1080/15332969.2020.1830638.