The roles of employee–employee collaboration and employee–customer collaboration in fitness service innovation: a comparison of frontline and non-frontline employees

PurposeIn this study the authors examined the impact of employees' collaborative behaviours with colleagues and customers (i.e. employee–employee collaboration and employee–customer collaboration) on their creative self-efficacy and service innovation from the perspective of service-dominant logic. The authors also examined the differences between frontline and non-frontline fitness service employees in our research model. This study aims to discuss the aforementioned objectives.Design/methodology/approachParticipants were fitness-centre employees in Taiwan recruited via convenience sampling. A total of 410 participants completed our online survey, and the authors analysed the data using partial least squares structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM).FindingsThe authors found that collaboration with both colleagues and customers had a positive impact on employees' creative self-efficacy. Collaboration with colleagues directly affected service innovation, while collaboration with customers indirectly affected service innovation via creative self-efficacy. In addition, there was a significant difference between frontline and non-frontline employees in our research model. Specifically, the path from collaboration with customers to creative self-efficacy was stronger for frontline employees, and the path from creative self-efficacy to service innovation was stronger for non-frontline employees.Originality/valueThis study improves the understanding of the way in which different collaborative behaviours promote employees' creative self-efficacy and service innovation. Further, it is the first to identify the difference between frontline and non-frontline employees and it shows how the effects of collaborative behaviours differ between them in the context of fitness services.

[1]  C. Cobanoglu,et al.  The role of trust in tourists’ motivation to participate in co-creation , 2023, Tourism Review.

[2]  H. Alves,et al.  Customer value co-creation in the hospitality and tourism industry: a systematic literature review , 2022, International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management.

[3]  K. Byon,et al.  Examining the Value Co-Creation Model in Motor Racing Events: Moderating Effect of Residents and Tourists , 2022, Sustainability.

[4]  Weisheng Chiu,et al.  Service encounter and repurchase intention in fitness centers: perceived value as a mediator and service innovativeness as a moderator , 2022, International Journal of Sports Marketing and Sponsorship.

[5]  P. Dey,et al.  AI-employee collaboration and business performance: Integrating knowledge-based view, socio-technical systems and organisational socialisation framework , 2022, Journal of Business Research.

[6]  Brent D. Oja,et al.  Navigating psychological membership in sport organizations: Exploring sport employees’ identities , 2022, Journal of Applied Sport Psychology.

[7]  C. Ok,et al.  Community marathon event participation and quality of life , 2021, Sport Management Review.

[8]  N. Glaveli,et al.  Exploring the role of fitness instructors’ interaction quality skills in building customer trust in the service provider and customer satisfaction , 2021, European Sport Management Quarterly.

[9]  Erik C. Taylor,et al.  Enhancing brand equity of branded mobile apps via motivations: A service-dominant logic perspective , 2021 .

[10]  S. Vargo Beyond Circularity—A Service-dominant (S-D) Logic Perspective , 2021, Circular Economy and Sustainability.

[11]  Lishan Xie,et al.  Using customer knowledge for service innovation in travel agency industry , 2020 .

[12]  Baoguo Shi,et al.  Achievement goals and creativity: the mediating role of creative self-efficacy , 2020 .

[13]  Jiseon Ahn,et al.  Co-creation and integrated resort experience in Croatia: The application of service-dominant logic , 2020 .

[14]  Brent D. Oja,et al.  Searching for sport employee creativity: a mixed-methods exploration , 2020, European Sport Management Quarterly.

[15]  D. Pyun,et al.  The impact of consumer knowledge on profitable consumer loyalty through perceived service quality and psychological involvement in non-profit sport clubs , 2020 .

[16]  Bradley J. Baker,et al.  Connecting Customer Knowledge Management and Intention to Use Sport Services Through Psychological Involvement, Commitment, and Customer Perceived Value , 2020 .

[17]  Divesh Kumar,et al.  Customer-to-customer value co-creation in different service settings , 2020 .

[18]  Ryan P. Royston,et al.  Creative self‐efficacy as mediator between creative mindsets and creative problem‐solving , 2019 .

[19]  Weisheng Chiu,et al.  Customer value co-creation behaviour in fitness centres: how does it influence customers’ value, satisfaction, and repatronage intention? , 2019, Managing Sport and Leisure.

[20]  Alexander Newman,et al.  The effects of employees' creative self-efficacy on innovative behavior: The role of entrepreneurial leadership , 2018, Journal of Business Research.

[21]  Lishan Xie,et al.  Customer knowledge sharing, creativity and value co-creation: A triad model of hotels, corporate sales employees and their customers , 2018 .

[22]  Arne De Keyser,et al.  “Service Encounter 2.0”: an investigation into the roles of technology, employees and customers , 2017 .

[23]  Kayhan Tajeddini,et al.  Service innovativeness and the structuring of organizations: The moderating roles of learning orientation and inter-functional coordination , 2017 .

[24]  Edward L. Deci,et al.  Self-Determination Theory in Work Organizations: The State of a Science , 2017 .

[25]  Jochen Wirtz,et al.  Managing service employees: literature review, expert opinions, and research directions , 2016 .

[26]  Christian Nitzl,et al.  Mediation Analysis in Partial Least Squares Path Modeling: Helping Researchers Discuss More Sophisticated Models , 2016, Ind. Manag. Data Syst..

[27]  Marko Sarstedt,et al.  Testing measurement invariance of composites using partial least squares , 2016 .

[28]  María Leticia Santos-Vijande,et al.  Frontline employees’ collaboration in industrial service innovation: routes of co-creation’s effects on new service performance , 2016 .

[29]  Rogelio Puente‐Díaz Creative Self-Efficacy: An Exploration of Its Antecedents, Consequences, and Applied Implications , 2016, The Journal of psychology.

[30]  Terje Slåtten,et al.  Determinants and effects of employee’s creative self-efficacy on innovative activities , 2014 .

[31]  L. Berry,et al.  Service Innovativeness and Firm Value , 2013 .

[32]  Horace L. Melton,et al.  Employee Collaboration, Learning Orientation, and New Service Development Performance , 2013 .

[33]  Sheng-Tsung Hou,et al.  Creative Self‐Efficacy and Innovative Behavior in a Service Setting: Optimism as a Moderator , 2011 .

[34]  A. Parasuraman,et al.  Service Innovation Viewed Through a Service-Dominant Logic Lens: A Conceptual Framework and Empirical Analysis , 2011 .

[35]  Chris W. Clegg,et al.  Why Do Employees Undertake Creative Action? , 2010 .

[36]  Simon S. K. Lam,et al.  Is Customer Participation in Value Creation a Double-Edged Sword? Evidence from Professional Financial Services across Cultures , 2010 .

[37]  John G. Lynch,et al.  Reconsidering Baron and Kenny: Myths and Truths about Mediation Analysis , 2010 .

[38]  Ruby P. Lee,et al.  The impact of network and environmental factors on service innovativeness , 2009 .

[39]  Stephen L. Vargo,et al.  From goods to service(s): Divergences and convergences of logics , 2008 .

[40]  Jan Kratzer,et al.  Stimulating the Potential: Creative Performance and Communication in Innovation Teams , 2004 .

[41]  P. Tierney,et al.  Creative Self-Efficacy: Its Potential Antecedents and Relationship to Creative Performance , 2002 .

[42]  N. Esposito From Meaning to Meaning: The Influence of Translation Techniques on Non-English Focus Group Research , 2001, Qualitative health research.

[43]  G. Hult,et al.  Innovation, Market Orientation, and Organizational Learning: An Integration and Empirical Examination , 1998 .

[44]  C. Fornell,et al.  Evaluating Structural Equation Models with Unobservable Variables and Measurement Error , 1981 .

[45]  R. Brislin Back-Translation for Cross-Cultural Research , 1970 .

[46]  George B. Cunningham,et al.  Understanding the Lack of Diversity in Sport Consumer Behavior Research , 2022, Journal of Sport Management.

[47]  Bei Hu,et al.  Creative self-efficacy mediates the relationship between knowledge sharing and employee innovation , 2016 .

[48]  T. Cheng,et al.  Continuous improvement competence, employee creativity, and new service development performance: A frontline employee perspective , 2016 .

[49]  M. Sarstedt,et al.  A new criterion for assessing discriminant validity in variance-based structural equation modeling , 2015 .

[50]  Marko Sarstedt,et al.  Multigroup Analysis in Partial Least Squares (PLS) Path Modeling: Alternative Methods and Empirical Results , 2011 .