PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Global companies beware: Rude customer treatment depends on culture

2013-03-25
(Press-News.org) A new UBC study reveals that North American service workers are more likely to sabotage rude customers, while Chinese react by disengaging from customer service altogether.

"Our research shows that culture plays a significant role in how frontline workers deal with customer abuse," says UBC Sauder School of Business Professor Daniel Skarlicki, a co-author of the study.

"In North America, employees tend to retaliate against offensive customers – doing things like giving bad directions or serving cold food. In China, workers are more likely to reduce the general quality of service they provide to all customers – nasty or nice."

In a paper to be published in the journal Personnel Psychology, Skarlicki and former Sauder PhD student Ruodan Shao studied how frontline employees at a luxury hotel with locations in Vancouver and Beijing reacted to customer mistreatment.

Although the level of abuse was consistent in both locations, North Americans resorted 20 per cent more often to sabotage to get revenge. Abused Chinese workers were 19 per cent more likely to feel a lack of enthusiasm in their jobs, responding negatively to statements like, "I voluntarily assist guests even if it means going beyond job requirements."

"North Americans take a surgical approach to abuse, zeroing in on individuals who mistreated them," says Skarlicki, noting that managers must be mindful of these cultural differences when expanding operations across the Pacific. "Chinese don't blame the transgressor. They blame the system – the company or customers they serve."

Skarlicki says the implications are clear: "When service-oriented companies go global, they need to heighten their sensitivity to how culture in a new market can influence the performance of frontline staff and tailor their customer service operations accordingly."

Backgrounder:

For the study, the researchers held focus groups with small groups of hotel employees in Beijing and Vancouver to identify a set of common abusive situations and methods workers used to sabotage ill-mannered guests.

Using this information, they conducted a series of surveys with more than 200 employees – 132 in Beijing and 82 in Vancouver. Participants reported the frequency they experienced abuse, the frequency of customer-directed sabotage as a result of customer abuse, and the level to which people felt an affinity toward their jobs.

Skarlicki notes that the study is responding to the ongoing trend of North American service industries expanding operations to China and increasingly Chinese companies doing likewise in North America.

He says the differing cultural responses observed in the study are in line with established traits of the two cultures, with North Americans tending to be more individualistic and Chinese more collectivistic.

### A Chinese translation of this media release is available upon request.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Feeling sick makes us less social online too

2013-03-25
When it comes to posting on social media, there are few areas of our lives that are off limits. We post about eating, working, playing, hunting, quilting – you name it. Just about everything is up for public consumption … except our health. A new study from BYU finds that while most of us go online regularly for help in diagnosing health issues, very few of us actually post information, questions or experiences on health topics. "Less than 15 percent of us are posting the health information that most of us are consuming," said Rosemary Thackeray, BYU professor of ...

46 gene sequencing test for cancer patients on the NHS

2013-03-25
The first multi-gene DNA sequencing test that can help predict cancer patients' responses to treatment has been launched in the National Health Service (NHS), thanks to a partnership between scientists at the University of Oxford and Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust. The test uses the latest DNA sequencing techniques to detect mutations across 46 genes that may be driving cancer growth in patients with solid tumours. The presence of a mutation in a gene can potentially determine which treatment a patient should receive. The researchers say the number of genes ...

Relieving chronic pain

2013-03-25
Each year, more than 35,000 patients in the United States are implanted with spinal cord stimulators to treat chronic pain. Unfortunately, up to half of such patients receive only very limited pain relief. To help more patients, scientists are developing a new device to deliver therapeutic stimulation in a more targeted way, reaching nerve fibers deep within the spinal cord. Standard devices, first introduced in 1967, work by delivering a low electrical current to the spinal cord that interferes with the body's pain signals. Such devices, however, are only able to deliver ...

Using fluctuating wind power

2013-03-25
Incorporating wind power into existing power grids is challenging because fluctuating wind speed and direction means turbines generate power inconsistently. Coupled with customers' varying power demand, many wind-farm managers end up wasting power-generation capacity and limiting the service life of turbines through active control – including fully stopping turbines – in order to avoid any possible damage to the power grid from spikes in supply. In a paper published in the American Institute of Physics' Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, researchers propose a ...

Ultra-precision positioning

2013-03-25
Ultra-precision positioning is required for the success of many scientific applications, including manufacturing semiconductors, aligning optics and manipulating cells. One of the challenges of ultra-precise positioning is providing sufficient torque through small, precise angles. In a paper accepted for publication in the Review of Scientific Instruments, a journal of the American Institute of Physics, researchers describe a new rotary actuator that accurately delivers more torque than previous devices. Like many other ultra-precise rotary actuators, the new device's ...

EARTH: Scientists reopen a lunar cold case

2013-03-25
Alexandria, VA – When Apollo 17 splashed down in the Pacific Ocean on Dec. 19, 1972, it ended an era of manned spaceflight to the moon. The science, however, continues. Armed with analytical techniques not available in the 1970s, researchers around the country have been re-examining the more than 380 kilograms of lunar rocks collected four decades ago during the Apollo missions. Using new investigations, such as petrographic and chemical composition studies and updated solar radiation and engineering measurements, these "cold case" scientists, many of them young innovators, ...

Scientists propose alternative method for the study of ions

2013-03-25
Scientists at the Department of Physics of the University of Oulu have teamed up with scientists in France, Russia and Japan to propose a new experimental method for researching positively charged ions. The study, In the Finnish side carried out by postdoctoral researcher Saana-Maija Huttula and Professor Marko Huttula in Oulu, was published in Physical Review Letters on 12 March 2013. The study involved investigating the electronic structure of the argon ions using synchrotron radiation. The proposed theoretical simulations were done using methods developed by an electron ...

Research: Women over 40 still need effective contraception

2013-03-25
Women reaching the age of 40 tend to be less vigilant about birth control because they think the risk of pregnancy is low – or that birth control can cause health problems - but a review of the evidence by a team that includes a Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island physician recently underscored the need to be vigilant about contraception even in perimenopause. "Despite declining fertility, women over age 40 still require effective contraception if they want to avoid pregnancy," according to Rebecca H. Allen, MD, MPH, of Women & Infants' Department of Obstetrics and ...

Businesses increase revenue with social media

2013-03-25
Researchers at Aalto University, the University at Buffalo, and Texas A&M University have proven a link between customers' use of social media and higher revenue. Now there is proof that customers who engage with a business through social media contribute more to the bottom line than customers who do not, said Ashish Kumar, assistant professor of marketing at Aalto University. Our study showed that social media activities help strengthen the bond between the customer and the firm. Participating customers on a firm's social media site contribute 5.6% more revenue and ...

How can we prepare better for emergencies?

2013-03-25
Well designed and planned exercises are essential to ensure that the UK can respond effectively to emergencies of all kinds, according to research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC). The emergencies may take the form of a terrorist attack, flooding, pandemic flu, rail or air disaster - or any major disruptive event requiring an emergency response. The number of such exercises taking place across the UK each year within what the researchers call the 'resilience community' - including emergency services, local authorities, central government departments ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Living heritage: How ancient buildings on Hainan Island sustain hidden plant diversity

Just the smell of lynx can reduce deer browsing damage in recovering forests

Hidden struggles: Cambridge scientists share the truth behind their success

Cellular hazmat team cleans up tau. Could it prevent dementia?

Innovation Crossroads startup revolutionizes wildfire prevention through grid hardening

ICCUB astronomers lead the most ambitious study of runaway massive stars in the Milky Way

Artificial Intelligence can generate a feeling of intimacy

Antidepressants not associated with serious complications from TBI

Evasive butterfly mimicry reveals a supercharged biodiversity feedback loop

Hearing angry or happy human voices is linked to changes in dogs’ balance

Microplastics are found in a third of surveyed fish off the coasts of remote Pacific Islands

De-stigmatizing self-reported data in health care research

US individuals traveling from strongly blue or red US counties may favor everyday travel to like-minded destinations

Study reveals how superionic state enables long-term water storage in Earth's interior

AI machine learning can optimize patient risk assessments

Efficacy of immunosuppressive regimens for survival of stem cell-derived grafts

Glowing bacterial sensors detect gut illness in mice before symptoms emerge

GLP-1 RAs and prior major adverse limb events in patients with diabetes

Life-course psychosocial stress and risk of dementia and stroke in middle-aged and older adults

Cells have a built-in capacity limit for copying DNA, and it could impact cancer treatment

Study finds longer hospital stays and higher readmissions for young adults with complex childhood conditions

Study maps how varied genetic forms of autism lead to common features

New chip-sized, energy-efficient optical amplifier can intensify light 100 times

New light-based platform sets the stage for future quantum supercomputers

Pesticides significantly affect soil life and biodiversity

Corals sleep like us, but their symbiosis does not rest

Huayuan biota decodes Earth’s first Phanerozoic mass extinction

Beyond Polymers: New state-of-the-art 3D micro and nanofabrication technique overcomes material limitations

New platform could develop vaccines faster than ever before

TF-rs1049296 C>T variant modifies the association between hepatic iron stores and liver fibrosis in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease

[Press-News.org] Global companies beware: Rude customer treatment depends on culture