In the service society, costumers’ role is pivotal. This article focuses on worker/customer interactions and aims at investigating some dimensions of the blurring boundaries between consumption and production focusing on workers’ lived experiences. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews with front line service workers (FLSWs), it sheds lights on two elements - the strength and the multidimensionality of human relationships that occur during customer/worker encounters and the process of self-identification with customers - that can explain why the interaction with customers are cited as positive aspects of the job, even in working contexts where job content is highly standardized, routinized and it is likely to be very alienating. Differently from most of the literature on prosumers, we do not adopt the customer’s perspective, but we investigate instead the point of view of sale assistants, highlighting how and to what extent it can be close to that of customers and for what reasons.
Coletto, D., Fullin, G. (2018). Labour behind consumption. The lived experiences of service workers interacting with customers. SOCIOLOGIA DEL LAVORO(152), 25-42 [10.3280/SL2018-152002].
Labour behind consumption. The lived experiences of service workers interacting with customers
Coletto, D;Fullin, G
2018
Abstract
In the service society, costumers’ role is pivotal. This article focuses on worker/customer interactions and aims at investigating some dimensions of the blurring boundaries between consumption and production focusing on workers’ lived experiences. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews with front line service workers (FLSWs), it sheds lights on two elements - the strength and the multidimensionality of human relationships that occur during customer/worker encounters and the process of self-identification with customers - that can explain why the interaction with customers are cited as positive aspects of the job, even in working contexts where job content is highly standardized, routinized and it is likely to be very alienating. Differently from most of the literature on prosumers, we do not adopt the customer’s perspective, but we investigate instead the point of view of sale assistants, highlighting how and to what extent it can be close to that of customers and for what reasons.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.