Publication | Closed Access
Must "Service With a Smile" Be Stressful? The Moderating Role of Personal Control for American and French Employees.
494
Citations
102
References
2005
Year
Social PsychologyFrench EmployeesHuman Resource ManagementEmotional ExpressionsWorker Well-beingOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyBe StressfulEmployee AttitudeManagementOrganizational PsychologyWork AttitudeStress ManagementJob SatisfactionPersonal ControlApplied Social PsychologyJob StrainNational CulturePerformance StudiesWork-related StressBusinessEmotion
Suppressing and faking emotional expressions depletes personal resources and predicts job strain for customer-contact employees. The authors argue that personal control over behavior, in the job and within the national culture, provides compensatory resources that reduce this strain. With a survey study of 196 employees from the United States and France, the authors supported that high job autonomy buffered the relationship of emotion regulation with emotional exhaustion and, to a lesser extent, job dissatisfaction. The relationship of emotion regulation with job dissatisfaction also depended on the emotional culture; the relationship was weaker for French customer-contact employees who were proposed to have more personal control over expressions than U.S. employees. Theoretical and research implications for the emotion regulation literature and practical suggestions for minimizing job strain are proposed.
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