Temple stays are emerging global cultural attractions that provide tourists with unique experiences and influence perceptions of value and satisfaction. This study examines the influence of escape, entertainment, esthetic, and educational experiences on perceptions of functional and emotional values as well as tourist satisfaction with temple stays. The results of the study show that escape and entertainment experiences are important predictors of both functional and emotional values. Esthetic experience influences emotional value, whereas educational experience affects functional value. Both functional and emotional values influence tourist satisfaction. Theoretical and practical implications of the study results are discussed.
Travel companies execute loyalty reward programs to enhance customer retention and loyalty. However, research examining customer loyalty in a cross-cultural setting is scant. To bridge that gap, this study examines the joint effects of reward type (luck-based vs. loyalty-based) and culture (Western vs. East Asian) on behavioral loyalty in the airline context. In this study, South Koreans showed significantly higher levels of behavioral loyalty when the reward was framed as a “lucky draw.” On the other hand, Americans did not differ in their behavioral loyalty across the two types of rewards. Moreover, self-construal accounts for the relationship between culture and behavioral loyalty. The findings of this study indicate that practitioners in the travel industry can leverage their target customers’ cultural orientation when designing their loyalty reward program.
Purpose
This systematic review synthesizes the recent literature (2010–2020) on hospitality employees’ emotions, affect and moods. This study has three objectives: to clarify the definitions of emotions, affect and moods; to explain how theories are integrated into understanding hospitality employees’ emotions, affect and moods; and to assess how emotions, affect and moods are measured.
Design/methodology/approach
Using seven major databases, the authors selected 61 peer-reviewed academic journal articles published in hospitality outlets for review. We based our study on five stages of conducting a systematic review: scoping, planning, identification, screening and eligibility.
Findings
Affect is an umbrella term encompassing moods and emotions. Emotions are distinct from emotion-laden constructs, such as emotional labor and emotional intelligence. Theories on conservation of resources, emotional labor and social exchange have been most frequently used to understand hospitality employees’ emotions. However, they overlooked the dynamic nature of emotions when using these theories. Hospitality researchers often used a subset of the positive and negative affect scale and did not discuss back-translation.
Practical implications
Hospitality employees’ emotions lead to far-reaching consequences in attitudes, intentions and behaviors in work and non-work domains. Effective practices (e.g. creating a supportive climate) that help evoke positive employee emotions and reduce negative employee emotions are thus desirable.
Originality/value
Our findings crystallize the understanding of emotions, affect and moods of hospitality employees. We further provide a roadmap for future research on hospitality employees’ emotions. Data triangulation, cross-cultural research and mixed emotions are novel opportunities for future research.
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, our indoor and outdoor leisure activities have profoundly changed. However, research on the way people negotiate leisure motivations with constraints and the relationship between leisure and quality of life during the COVID-19 pandemic is scant. On the basis of in-depth interviews with 32 residents in South Korea in 2020, this study reveals that they proactively overcome leisure constraints; their leisure activities are not reduced but slightly modified (e.g. watching baseball games online vs. at a ballpark) or even increased (e.g. camping).When people articulate quality of life during the pandemic, work, health, and family are more salient themes than leisure and travel. Such finding is incongruent with previous research emphasising the importance of leisure and vacations in the quality of life. This study extends the model of leisure constraints negotiation to the context of a pandemic and advances our understanding of the multi-dimensional nature of the quality of life.
This study aims to examine the effect of perceived corporate social responsibility (CSR) performance on hotel employees' behavior, as reflected in their attitude and satisfaction.Understanding employees' reaction to and perception of hotel CSR is essential before exercising effective CSR practices with customers. This study indicates that the social/philanthropic and ethical domains of hotel CSR enhance employees' attitude and satisfaction with working for this CSR-implementing hotel and their behavior (organizational citizenship, pro-social, and proenvironmental behaviors) within an organization and society. However, environmental, legal, and financial domains do not significantly affect attitude toward CSR-implementing hotel. In addition, the hotel employees' organizational tenure partially moderates the relationships among the proposed constructs. This study is the initial empirical attempt to understand hotel employees' responses to hotel CSR. It provides insights and practical suggestions into human resource departments for maximizing the effectiveness of CSR implementation in the hotel industry.
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