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Purpose

This study seeks to investigate intergroup anxiety and self-presentation as two competing mechanisms that explain how negative meta-stereotypes (NMSs) influence turnover intention and to explore how a sense of power moderates these effects.

Design/methodology/approach

One cross-sectional survey and one scenario-based experiment were conducted. Structural equation modeling was utilized to analyze data from the cross-sectional survey, while PROCESS modeling was applied in the scenario-based experiment.

Findings

Hotel employees’ NMSs increased turnover intention through intergroup anxiety rather than self-presentation. Additionally, a sequential mediation was observed, whereby NMSs heighten intergroup anxiety, reducing self-presentation and increasing turnover intention. Furthermore, hotel employees having higher power over customers showed greater resilience to NMSs, experienced less intergroup anxiety, and thus engaged in more proactive self-presentation.

Practical implications

Managers should implement strategies such as promoting positive meta-stereotypes, encouraging deeper employee–customer interactions and adopting empowering leadership practices.

Originality/value

The findings enrich our understanding of the psychological mechanism by which NMSs influence hotel employees’ turnover intentions. Furthermore, our findings make contributions by modeling a sense of power as a boundary condition for such effects.

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