Does gender moderate the effects of role stress in frontline service jobs?

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Elsevier Science Inc

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Abstract

By focusing on gender differences in structural relationships rather than differences in levels of constructs, this study extends Babin and Boles' [Babin B. J., Boles J. S. Employee behavior in a service environment: a model and test of potential differences between men and women. Journal of Marketing 1998;62:77-91.] research examining the effects of role stress on customer-contact employees' various job outcomes to a new context (frontline bank employees in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus). Results indicate that gender has a moderating role on the relationships between role ambiguity and self-efficacy, and role conflict and job satisfaction. Cultural norms may play a role in the way gender moderates these relationships. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

role stress, self-efficacy, job satisfaction, gender, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus

Journal or Series

Journal of Business Research

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Volume

59

Issue

10-11

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