Abstract

Employees of retail travel agencies in sales roles can have long-lasting, direct contact with tourists which, in the case of poor customer service, can be extremely problematic for businesses. Because of this, it is important to understand how employees manage their emotions to help them to remain satisfied with their work, thus contributing to the satisfaction of tourists. However, job satisfaction, emotional intelligence and emotional labor in tourism have not previously been studied together as variables in a single model. This research analyses the mediating role of emotional intelligence in the relationship between job satisfaction and emotional labor in travel agencies, as well as job satisfaction as an antecedent of emotional labor. Data were collected from 160 employees of 45 travel agencies in the Serbian cities of Belgrade and Novi Sad. Results show that employees’ emotional intelligence mediates the positive relationship between job satisfaction and emotional labor. Management implications: Increasing employees’ emotional intelligence through training and development and actively recruiting employees with high emotional intelligence will reduce emotional exhaustion and improve customer satisfaction for retail travel agencies. Future research should include employees from other countries, in order to make comparisons and to validate results, as well as to test the created model by structural equation modelling (SEM), involving some other possible mediators, such as socio-demographics, personality traits or work motivation.

Highlights

  • In tourism, employees are required to ‘manage’ their own emotions in order to deliver the levels of customer service that will lead to repeat business, word of mouth recommendation and customer satisfaction

  • The two sections of this review examine the relationship between emotional labor, emotional intelligence and job satisfaction, as factors that helps to explain the impact of emotional labor on tourism employees

  • The aims of the study were to explore the influence of job satisfaction and emotional intelligence on emotional labor in travel agencies, and to examine the mediating role of emotional intelligence in the relation between job satisfaction and emotional labor

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Summary

Introduction

Employees are required to ‘manage’ their own emotions in order to deliver the levels of customer service that will lead to repeat business, word of mouth recommendation and customer satisfaction This can cause high levels of stress, including emotional ‘burnout’, one of the numerous aspects that might jeopardize the success of a business (Jeong et al, 2017; Prentice et al, 2013). Tourism is a labor-intensive activity, that involves high levels of emotional work (Deery and Jago, 2009; Marques et al, 2018; Toprak et al, 2015) In this context, it is important to consider the role of employees as a key factor in achieving business results, through the employee’s commitment to the services they provide and the emotions they convey to customers, which reflect their satisfaction with their job and their business environment (Wu et al, 2018)

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