Publication | Closed Access
Chinese hotel employees in the smiling masks: roles of job satisfaction, burnout, and supervisory support in relationships between emotional labor and performance
141
Citations
41
References
2011
Year
Job PerformanceHuman Resource ManagementWorker Well-beingOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyHospitality Human ResourcesEmployee AttitudeBurnoutChinese Hotel EmployeesSurvey DataManagementHospitality MarketingHospitality IndustryWork AttitudeJob SatisfactionApplied Social PsychologySupervisory SupportPerformance StudiesBusinessEmployee EngagementEmotionHospitality Management
Using survey data obtained from 206 frontline hotel employees (Study 1) and 111 employee–supervisor dyads (Study 2), we examined how the emotional labor of hotel employees was associated with affective and behavioral outcomes. We found that surface acting was negatively related to job satisfaction but positively related to burnout. Meanwhile, deep acting was positively related to job satisfaction but negatively related to burnout. Additionally, job satisfaction and burnout were found to mediate the relationship between emotional labor and work performance. We further found that supervisory support moderated the relationships between emotional labor and job satisfaction and burnout.
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