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Employee development strategies in the B2C banking environment: two Australian case studies

conference contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00 authored by Yvette Blount, Tanya Castleman, P Swatman
The implementation of technology and, in particular, eCommerce technologies has had unforeseen consequences for the relationship between managers and employees. To be able to operate in an increasingly global and competitive environment, retail banks have had to develop new ways of dealing with their employees. Issues have arisen that have necessitated a rethink in the way employees interact with customers and this, in turn, has required changes to human resource strategies. The question we address in this paper is what are the employee capabilities and qualities retail banks must develop to satisfy both more sophisticated customers (who demand flexibility of interactions, responsiveness and convenience) as well as the organisation’s own needs (including expanded sales opportunities, cost containment or reduction and customer loyalty) when implementing eCommerce technologies. The paper discusses two case studies illustrating some of the issues with which banks, as service organisations, have had to deal. These two banks have taken rather different approaches in their use of technology to interact with their customers and this has implications for the way they manage their employees who deal with those customers.

History

Title of proceedings

European IS profession in the global networking environment : proceedings of the 12th European Conference on Information Systems, Turku, Finland, June 14 - 16, 2004

Event

European Conference on Information Systems (12th : 2004 : Turku, Finland)

Pagination

1 - 12

Publisher

Turku School of Economics and Business Administration

Location

Turku, Finland

Place of publication

Turku, Finland

Start date

2004-06-14

End date

2004-06-16

ISBN-13

9789515641922

ISBN-10

9515641926

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2000 - 2005 LSE IS Department

Editor/Contributor(s)

T Reponen

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