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Published in: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science 3/2011

01-06-2011 | Original Empirical Research

Multiple emotional contagions in service encounters

Authors: Jiangang Du, Xiucheng Fan, Tianjun Feng

Published in: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | Issue 3/2011

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Abstract

This paper investigates the dynamic impact of multiple sequential emotional displays by employees on customers’ negative emotions. Using video-based stimuli to manipulate emotional displays by employees, this study shows the sequential occurrences of negative and positive emotional contagions in service failure and recovery encounters. The results suggest that higher levels of employees’ negative emotional displays lead to a greater increase in customers’ negative emotions through the process of negative emotional contagion during service failure. More importantly, we find that positive emotional displays by employees can decrease customers’ negative emotions through the process of positive emotional contagion during service recovery, i.e., higher levels of employee positive emotional displays lead to a greater decrease in customers’ negative emotions. In addition, no matter whether customers experience higher or lower levels of employee positive emotional displays during service recovery, their final negative emotions cannot fully return to their emotional levels prior to service failure. However, for customers experiencing higher levels of employee positive emotional displays, their final negative emotions can be greatly mitigated and are closer to their initial emotional levels, as compared to customers experiencing lower levels of employee positive emotional displays. The results further indicate that susceptibility to emotional contagion increases the effect of employees’ negative (positive) emotional displays on customers’ negative emotions during service failure (recovery). The findings of this study suggest that service firms should provide effective training to their frontline service employees so that they can display proper positive emotions during service encounters.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
For example, in our experiment, we controlled those cognitive primes, such as the impact of long-term waiting for food delivery, the impact of the time interval between watching service failure and service recovery, etc.
 
2
Note that the picture in Fig. 2a is a general illustration of the service interactions in our study. It is not a snapshot of the videotape that subjects had been watching during the experiment. In the videotape, the camera focused on the facial expressions and movements of the manager and waitress.
 
3
Note that Dallimore et al. (2007) used both mimicry observations (e.g., facial or body language responses) and the self-reported PANAS scale (i.e., cognitive responses) to examine the process of emotional contagion in the service setting.
 
4
Similar to customers’ negative emotion items, we pre-designed a set of statements of emotional states by referring to the PANAS scale. Before the formal experiment, we interviewed six undergraduate students by asking them which statements could describe their current emotional states well among the set of predesigned statements. Finally, the above four statements received the most votes from them and so were selected to form the pre-questionnaire questions.
 
5
Group A represents the group of participants who were exposed to the waitress’ low negative emotional display and the manager’s low positive emotional display. Group B represents the group of participants who were exposed to the waitress’ high negative emotional display and the manager’s low positive emotional display. Group C represents the group of participants who were exposed to the waitress’ low negative emotional display and the manager’s high positive emotional display. Group D represents the group of participants who were exposed to the waitress’ high negative emotional display and the manager’s high positive emotional display.
 
6
A K-means cluster analysis attempts to identify relatively homogeneous groups of cases based on selected characteristics using an algorithm that can handle large numbers of cases.
 
7
We are grateful to an anonymous referee for this suggestion.
 
8
We are grateful to an anonymous referee for this suggestion.
 
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Metadata
Title
Multiple emotional contagions in service encounters
Authors
Jiangang Du
Xiucheng Fan
Tianjun Feng
Publication date
01-06-2011
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science / Issue 3/2011
Print ISSN: 0092-0703
Electronic ISSN: 1552-7824
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-010-0210-9

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