Employee empowerment is said to benefit all organisations. The fast moving global economy requires that organisations learn and adapt to change quickly, and employees have a key role to play here. This is particularly true in modern service organisations. The empowered employee is said to respond more quickly to customer service requests, act to rectify complaints and be more engaged in service encounters. A more reflective approach suggests there are different managerial perceptions of empowerment, resulting in empowerment being introduced in different service organisations in different ways, and presenting different benefits to managers and working experiences for the empowered. This paper suggests that a framework of analysis needs to be developed which goes beyond the more simplistic claims which tend to discuss empowerment as that which is labelled empowerment. The success or failure of an initiative which claims to be empowering will be determined by the experience of being empowered.
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1 August 1999
Case Report|
August 01 1999
Employee empowerment in services: a framework for analysis Available to Purchase
Conrad Lashley
Conrad Lashley
The School of Tourism and Hospitality Management, Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6933
Print ISSN: 0048-3486
© MCB UP Limited
1999
Personnel Review (1999) 28 (3): 169–191.
Citation
Lashley C (1999), "Employee empowerment in services: a framework for analysis". Personnel Review, Vol. 28 No. 3 pp. 169–191, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/00483489910264570
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