The role of scripts as a job design tool, and the functional and dysfunctional impacts of mindlessness that can result from the habitual and repetitive performance of scripts is examined from a service perspective. Five dimensions of scripts are then proposed: script complexity – the degree to which scripts require cognition during their performance; script intensity – the degree to which the script permits variation and adlibbing in its performance; number of scripts – an absolute measure of the number of scripts that must be learned to perform the job; percentage of time in script – the percentage of work time spent in scripted behaviour; and percentage of scripted duties – the percentage of a worker′s job duties or tasks that are scripted. These dimensions are then examined in the context of the degree of customer‐induced uncertainty experienced by service organisations. Finally, a model is proposed that relates the five script dimensions to high, medium, and low levels of customer‐induced uncertainty.
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1 April 1991
This article was originally published in
International Journal of Service Industry Management
Research Article|
April 01 1991
Dimensions of Job Scripting in Services Organisations Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6704
Print ISSN: 0956-4233
© MCB UP Limited
1991
International Journal of Service Industry Management (1991) 2 (1): 35–49.
Citation
Tansik DA, Smith WL (1991), "Dimensions of Job Scripting in Services Organisations". International Journal of Service Industry Management, Vol. 2 No. 1 pp. 35–49, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09564239110000127
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