The core concept of “customer” in marketing began as a buyer of business goods and services. It was extended into non‐business areas such as education, health, politics and religion. Now it stands poised to enter organisational life. At issue here is our understanding of what it means to be a “customer”. Aims to question the legitimacy of applying the concept “customer” to employees. In exploring this makes a contrast between the “traditional” customer as we have come to know it and “life” as an employee. Suggests a test of legitimacy in which a number of factors characteristic of the “traditional” customer are discussed with a view to determining whether they can accommodate the employee as a potential internal customer. Concludes that the concept is inappropriate for employees given what is known of organisational life and the employees’ place within it. There is considerable conceptual elasticity in the way the concept “customer” is being used that will cast serious doubt over the prospect for the achievement of internal marketing aims.
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1 October 2003
Review Article|
October 01 2003
Internal customer: by design or by default Available to Purchase
Peter Mudie
Peter Mudie
Napier University Business School, Napier University, Edinburgh, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7123
Print ISSN: 0309-0566
© MCB UP Limited
2003
European Journal of Marketing (2003) 37 (9): 1261–1276.
Citation
Mudie P (2003), "Internal customer: by design or by default". European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 37 No. 9 pp. 1261–1276, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/03090560310486988
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