Abstract :
[en] Disclosing bad news to customers during service encounters is an unavoidable, demanding task that can generate signifcant stress for frontline employees (FLEs). Despite the pervasiveness of bad news disclosure in service contexts, prior research
has not explicitly examined how FLEs prepare for or optimize the delivery of bad news, whether to reduce their own work
stress or to mitigate its negative impact on customers. Using multidisciplinary literature and depth interviews pertaining to 192 bad news disclosures, this research (1) delineates the concept of bad news disclosure and the types of bad news disclosed
in service settings; (2) draws on coping theory to develop an integrative framework of how bad news disclosure unfolds in service encounters and how it affects customer-, employee-, and organization-related outcomes; (3) ofers a protocol that FLEs can use to prepare for bad news disclosure and soften the blow for customers; and (4) proposes a research agenda to clarify how service organizations and FLEs should manage bad news disclosure.
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