posted on 2023-08-30, 16:23authored byManuela Koch-Rogge
The service industry is the most important economic sector worldwide. Thus, economic
growth within developed economies is almost exclusively based on services. In the
production of services, employees have a crucial influence on the perceived quality of
the output, since they are the core of the interaction with the customers. In this context,
employees´ knowledge and skills are primary resources for an organization´s ability to
compete and generate profits. The adequate evaluation of employee performance,
employee empowerment and a concern for training therefore becomes a necessity for
each service organization. However, traditional approaches for evaluating employee
performance mostly originate from the manufacturing sector and therefore often fall short
in accounting for the advanced requirements of evaluating service performance. A
promising approach that may be able to address several of the shortcomings of
traditional performance evaluation approaches is the Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA),
which has widely been used to evaluate the performance of organizations in a variety of
contexts. However, there is still very little experience regarding the application of DEA
on individual level and employee´s response to it.
Adopting a case-study strategy based on a mixed methods approach, this research
investigates DEA´s technical and organisational suitability for evaluating employees´
performance in the service sector. After reviewing literature on why services may require
an advanced approach for performance evaluation and on DEA´s previous applications
in organizational contexts, the DEA approach was applied to performance data of 40
service employees in a German Cooperative Bank to gain empirical evidence. Hence, in
a quantitative analysis, the results of the application were examined to assess DEA´s
technical suitability and to gain a deeper understanding of its application on individual
level. Subsequently, focus group interviews among bank managers and members of the
workers´ council as well as a questionnaire study among employees were carried out to
investigate DEA´s perception by all major stakeholders and thus provide substantiation
of its organizational suitability. Eventually, the evidence from these multiple sources was
analysed by triangulation.
The findings indicate that DEA is a suitable approach to overcome many shortcomings
of traditional approaches. Thus, the thesis concludes by summarizing the results,
reflecting on limitations and by pointing out implications that may contribute to draw
analytic generalizations to inform theory and practice.
History
Institution
Anglia Ruskin University
File version
Accepted version
Language
eng
Thesis name
PhD
Thesis type
Doctoral
Legacy posted date
2019-07-08
Legacy creation date
2019-07-08
Legacy Faculty/School/Department
Theses from Anglia Ruskin University/Lord Ashcroft International Business School