Abstract

The effect of perspective taking on performance is well documented in extant literature, yet a lack of theoretical discussion explicates how employees’ adoption of the customer’s perspective results in satisfactory customer service performance. The current study fills this void. Drawing from both motivated information processing and proactivity perspectives, we establish a theoretical model that delineates the process of how customer-oriented perspective taking contributes to proactive customer service performance. We conducted a three-wave time-lagged study, involving 145 frontline employees and their immediate supervisors in the Chinese hospitality industry, to test the research model. The results of multilevel structural equation modeling show that a high level of role-breadth self-efficacy (RBSE) (Time 2) results when employees take the customer’s perspective (Time 1). This relationship becomes stronger if employees are also high in proactive personality (Time 1). Furthermore, a high level of RBSE (Ti...

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