Boukis Et Al. 2021 - Internal Marketing A Systematic Review
Boukis Et Al. 2021 - Internal Marketing A Systematic Review
Boukis Et Al. 2021 - Internal Marketing A Systematic Review
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Abstract
Responding to the inadequacies and fragmentation of the Internal Marketing (IM) literature,
this paper delivers a systematic review and synthesis of IM research. Based on an analysis of
349 articles, this work maps the evolution of IM research and identifies four distinct periods
to the ongoing debate about the IM concept and its scope and presents an agenda for
researchers.
1
INTRODUCTION
The indispensable value of human capital for providing contemporary firms with a sustainable
competitive advantage and higher revenues is widely acknowledged (Edo et al., 2015).
Organizations like IBM put employees’ experience with the firm and job satisfaction at the
core of their activity, based on the belief that “if employees feel great about their job, so would
do their clients” (Burrell, 2018, p.54). In line with extensive research in the OB and HR
literatures that examine how organizations can enhance employees’ performance (del Brío et
al., 2007), Internal Marketing (IM) was originally proposed as the managerial philosophy of
treating employees as internal customers, designing jobs as products to satisfy and motivate
performance and render them more customer-conscious with the aim of generating positive
customer outcomes such as increased customer satisfaction and loyalty (Lings & Greenley,
2010; Kadic-Maglajlic et al., 2018). Studies in the field identify a variety of benefits for
identification, and better brand understanding (Huang & Rundle-Thiele, 2014; Ozuem et al.,
2018). However, the IM discourse faces two important challenges. From a theoretical
perspective, the exponential growth of the IM literature, the fragmentation of IM work and the
value creation, without looking into how employees can actively participate in value creation
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At the same time, the evolution of the global labour market has resulted in more flexible
and dynamic firm-employee contractual relationships (e.g. work on demand) and reduced
loyalty among staff (e.g. Curran & Healy, 2014). These changes in the role of service
frameworks advance (Gounaris, 2006) and restrict managerial understanding of how IM should
be implemented, and the managerial actions involved in its adoption (Paul & Sahadev, 2018).
Hence, these challenges have put at risk its relevance to contemporary business reality.
In response to these challenges, this article delivers a timely systematic review and
synthesis of the literature in the IM domain. By analysing 349 articles published in the area
since 1981, this systematic review aims at synthesizing IM research in a systematic, transparent
and reproducible approach with a dual objective; first; to better organize contemporaneous IM
knowledge and the benefits from adopting IM practices for both employees and organizations.
frameworks and discusses a future research agenda for advancing the field in light of recent
METHOD
The aim of this article is to systematically search, evaluate and synthesize the existing IM work.
A comprehensive search of the IM literature was conducted by using the term ‘Internal
Marketing’ as a keyword in the Business Source Premier (BSP) database, which includes 98%
of bibliographic records for 25 business and management journals with the highest impact
factors (Niesten & Stefan, 2019). In addition, we utilized additional features in our search to
locate additional studies not identified by BSP (Bailey et al., 2017), such as citation tracking,
scanning reference lists and tracking new publication alerts on Google scholar. Additional
searches took place in specialised areas that have attracted IM research (i.e. Nursing, Education
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and Social Science). Data collection covered the period from 1981, when Berry (1981) first
To determine the eligibility of articles for the systematic review, first, we limited the
search into peer-reviewed English language journal articles (excluding books, book chapters,
conference papers, thesis and dissertations), as they are central in validating new knowledge
(Crossan & Apaydin, 2010). Based on these criteria, using the term ‘Internal Marketing’, in
the title, keywords, abstract and/or main body of the study, we resulted in an initial dataset of
1081 studies. A second criterion for inclusion was their empirical or conceptual relevance to
the field of IM. After a full-text screening of these studies, 349 IM studies remained in our final
dataset.
From this dataset, data was extracted in a number of areas (Leonidou & Leonidou,
2011): 1. Publication profile and impact (i.e. subject, publication date, journal); 2. Scope of
research (i.e. countries, industry coverage, unit of analysis; 3. Key content (i.e. keywords;
definitions, theories and frameworks); 3. IM practices and activities advocated and outcomes
(at the employee and organization level). By combining information about the scope,
conceptualization, approved practices and empirical outcomes of IM research this study offers
To help us understand how the field emerged and developed both conceptually and empirically,
our analysis resulted in the articles in the dataset (N=349) being grouped into four near equal-
sized periods, namely the 4Es: the “Emergence” (pre-2007), the “Establishment” (2007-2012),
the “Explosion” (2013- 2016), and the “Ennui” era (2017–onwards). From the first article on
IM by Berry (1981) the area initially struggled to gain traction in academic literature, with only
81 articles being published before 2007 (an average of less than 3.1 articles per year). In the
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establishment period, the first attempts to define IM emerge and the IM field is attracting
increasing attention with 88 articles being published (14.7 per year). In the two recent two
periods, there has been an exponential growth with an average of 22.5 article published per
year. The 349 articles included 50 conceptual articles, and 299 empirical studies (43 qualitative
and 256 quantitative studies). As the field developed there was a shift towards empirical
research and the proportion of conceptual and qualitative research has been steadily tailing off.
In terms of the empirical studies, employees (notably frontline employees) were predominantly
used as key informants (54.5%) reflecting the “employees as internal customers’ approach of
IM (see Table 1). Managers or research mixing the perspectives from different levels (e.g.
senior managers or line managers with employees), has become relatively underutilised in the
“ennui” era.
management fields. We categorized the articles according to the subject areas in the
Association of Business Schools Journal List (ABS List, 2015; see Table 2). Journals not on
the ABS list were assigned by the authors according to their stated scope and content (44% of
articles were in non-ABS list journals). The majority of the papers not in ABS journals were
published in management or marketing journals that, whilst they are listed in Scientific Journal
Rankings (SJR) reports, have not as yet been ranked by ABS. Several papers were published
in sector and specialist journals in non-management areas (e.g. Journal of Advanced Nursing).
IM research started out as a marketing concept with the majority of articles in marketing
journals. However, the choice of journals also reflects the service focus with sector specialist
journals, especially in financial services, hospitality and healthcare, being increasingly popular.
IM is aimed at employees and this is reflected in the steady stream of publications in more
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general management journals. Nowadays, IM is not viewed as being solely resting within the
domain of marketing. Articles are increasingly emerging in other specialist subject areas.
One of the problems facing IM research is that it has failed to gain widespread
acceptance in so-called “A” level journals (classified as 4 or 4* on the ABS list, 2015). Only
two articles have been published in the highest quality journals (4*). These were Wieseke and
their colleagues (2009) and Lam and their colleagues (2010), both in the Journal of Marketing.
The heyday of IM scholarship appears to have been in the period of 2009-2015. Nine of the 11
top quality articles were published in this period with articles appearing in Journal of the
Academy of Marketing Science (Celsi & Gilly, 2010; Chan & Lam 2011; Hughes, 2013);
Journal of Service Research (Suh et al., 2011), Journal of Applied Psychology (Ehrhart et al.,
2011) and Tourism Management (Chow et al., 2015; Huang & Rundle-Thiele, 2014). This
suggests that the quality of IM research and its contribution to theory is somewhat lacking.
To understand why the IM body of knowledge has not achieved a more significant impact we
scrutinise the literature over the four periods. In the emergence period, scholars highlight the
need for service firms to enhance the management of their employees (via marketing and HR
approaches) so that they can enhance customer perceived service quality (Green, Walls &
Schrest, 1994; Varey, 1995). During this period, the first strategic conceptualizations of IM are
introduced (e.g. Foreman & Money, 1995) aspiring to discuss its relevance with other
organizational functions. In the establishment period, a more extensive stream of works refines
IM and identifies a variety of strategies and tactic that underlie IM programs; also, empirical
evidence confirms IM’s practices strong impact on employees’ performance when interacting
with customers (Gounaris et al., 2010; Ehrhart et al., 2011). In the explosion period, a plethora
of studies replicate the effect of IM dimensions on various service industries and extend their
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organizational performance (Fang et al., 2014; Kim et al., 2016). Last, in the “ennui” era,
pertinent work explores the value of IM for various aspects of organizational performance (e.g.
corporate brand, innovation teams) and links its adoption with customer experience with the
conceptualizations of IM, the underlying IM dimensions, the outcomes of IM, and the
boundaries of IM theory.
The IM concept initially derives from a focus on enhancing the quality of (internal) service
customers and designing job/products that are attractive to them will satisfy and motivate them
to deliver high-quality services (Berry, 1981). However, over the years there has been no clear
single accepted conceptualisation of IM and the literature has taken different perspectives.
perspective views the quality of internal exchanges between the firm and employees as a
prerequisite for better external exchanges (George, 1990). Berry’s (1981) work views IM as a
frontline employees, who are viewed as internal customers (Sasser & Arbeit, 1976). This is a
Gounaris, 2006). This is despite criticism of this “jobs as products” perspective where jobs
might be unwanted and the contradictive sovereignty between internal and external customers
motivated and customer-oriented (Gronroos, 1985). In this logic, keeping employees satisfied
is a minimum for firms to meet and they also need to develop a sales-oriented mentality (Rafiq
7
& Ahmed, 2000). Both approaches recognize the importance of employees’ centrality in
dealing with customer expectations, Gronroos’ logic focuses more on employees’ customer
orientation through influencing and training, rather than generating higher employee
reduce the situational conflict among functions, facilitating the achievement of strategic
management strategy to overcome resistance and provide the first holistic definition of IM as
“a planned effort using a (1) marketing-like approach to (2) motivate employees, targeting on
delivering (3) customer satisfaction and (4) achieving organizational objectives through (5)
inter-functional coordination” (p. 454). This definition expands the scope of IM activities from
just focusing on employee motivation and customer consciousness to placing more attention
on the achievement of goals. Recognizing the central role of service provider, it integrates and
advances internal resources and capabilities to meet external objectives through process and
Market Orientation (IMO) (Lings, 2004; Lings and Greenley, 2005). Work around the notion
of IMO reflects service firms’ managerial care and strategic responsiveness to their internal
market’s functioning and explores integrated ways to improve employees’ role effectiveness,
communication norms and HR processes, among others (Gounaris, 2006). These studies
provide some preliminary evidence on IMO generating favourable customer outcomes (e.g.
customer perceived service quality (Edo et a., 2015; Gounaris et al., 2010). Later approaches
have begun to view IM as a set of organizational/dynamic capabilities that enable the firm to
meet its marketing and customer goals (Gounaris et al., 2020; Hughes et al., 2012) as well as
8
enhance employees’ engagement in value (co)-creation activities (Boukis, 2019; Vivek et al.,
2012). Consistent with value creation process through Service-dominant Logic (SDL), the
firms cannot create value for all stakeholders without employees’ participation in the process
(Madhavaram & Hunt, 2008; Boukis & Kabadayi, 2020). From this perspective, organizations
are no longer the ‘active implementers’ and the employees are no longer the ‘passive recipients’.
Both lying on the positions of value creators, the active relationship between corporates and
Emerging Dimensions of IM
plethora of strategic and tactical activities, processes and practices that comprise successful IM
programs (Ahmed & Rafiq, 2003; Lings & Greenley, 2005). Drawing on the aim of this diverse
mix of IM activities, we classify them into six overarching dimensions: (1) Internal Market
Analytics; (2) Internal Communication; (3) Employee Development; (4) Employee Rewards
and Recognition; (5) Job Design and Empowerment; (6) Leadership and Organizational
Culture. The definitions of these dimensions and examples of their underlying practices are
discussed below.
This categorization of the scope of IM acknowledges prior work in the field that views
Lings & Greenley, 2005); that considers IM a bundle of HR activities and an organized effort
of recruitment, training and retention of customer-conscious employees (e.g. Hwang & Chi,
2005); and, it advances an integrated framework of the IM literature, with five main dimensions
and “leadership and organizational culture” as an antecedent of these five dimensions (see
Figure 1).
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Internal Market Analytics refers to activities towards collecting and analysing of
intelligence for the firm’s internal (employee) market (Gounaris, 2006). Similar to the adoption
of market orientation, employees’ needs and wants should be identified first, before customer-
oriented actions take place (Lings, 2004). This dimension reflects the extent to which
organizations gather and integrate intelligence and data regarding their employees from various
primary and secondary sources (Tortosa-Edo et al., 2015). However, empirical IM studies
rarely discuss how firms collect and act on employee data to improve their experience with the
Internal Communication captures the practices through which firms build relationships
between internal stakeholders and disseminate info across organizational echelons (Park &
Tran, 2018). This dimension consists of various elements, the dissemination of tacit and
explicit knowledge across the organization (Lings & Greenley, 2005), the formation of
effective vertical and horizontal interpersonal relationships (Smith & O’Sullivan, 2012), inter-
functional integration and cooperation mechanisms (Conduit & Mavondo, 2001), and shared
support existing and new employees’ personal growth and career perspective. As a key IM
dimension, it helps frontline staff becomes more motivated and customer-oriented, as well as
equips them with service knowledge, skills and capabilities (Fang et al., 2014). HRM practices
such as employee recruitment and selection (Akroush et al., 2013), professional customer-
oriented training (Wieseke et al., 2009), educational development (Smith & O’Sullivan, 2012)
and career advancement opportunities (Budhwar et al., 2009) are employed to ensure the
10
Employee Rewards and Recognition include financial and relational rewards to staff,
based on their job performance. Financial (extrinsic) and relational (intrinsic) rewards work
rewarding the behaviours aligned with corporate values and mission (Ahmed & Rafiq, 2003).
Feedback and performance appraisal systems (Chan & Lam, 2011) provide employees the
standards and objectives to achieve, and based on it, job evaluation (Budhwar et al., 2009), job
security (Bell et al., 2004) and recognition systems (Anaza & Rutherford, 2012) are designed
Job Design and Empowerment emphasize role requirements such as job assignments,
content and description and provide employees with autonomy to make job-related decisions
to enhance internal and external service quality (Paul & Sahadev, 2018). The enhanced job
design can be considered as a better “product” to satisfy employee needs, and as such we argue
that this dimension bridges the marketing and HRM perspectives in IM. Employee
important aspect of this dimension (Chan & Lam, 2011). In addition, appropriate workload and
support (Yildiz & Kara, 2017), job control (Peltier et al., 2006), role clarity (Suh & Lee, 2016),
job rotation (Zampetakis & Moustakis, 2007), and work-family balance (Ruizalba et al., 2014)
are empirically confirmed to be positively related to internal service quality (Akroush et al.,
2013).
Leadership and Organizational Culture refers to the senior management team’s support
and leadership style adopted to establish a market-oriented service climate assisting employees
to solve job-related problems (Kim et al., 2016). Also, senior management should establish a
market-oriented organizational culture (Conduit & Mavondo, 2001), where employees are
encouraged to embark in extra-role activity and improve customers’ experience with the firm
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(Lings & Greenley, 2010). A number of studies emphasise the importance of this dimension
for IM adoption (e.g. Wieseke et al., 2009; Chan & Lam, 2011; Ruizalba et al., 2014; Boukis
et al., 2021); therefore, we argue that this dimension enables the successful implementation of
aforementioned dimensions. Table 3 shows the frequency each dimension has been measured
by the studies in the IM dataset (this excludes qualitative research articles). Internal
communication is emphasised the most, especially in the “ennui” period with 93% of the
studies including a measure of internal communication, considerably more frequently than all
orientation. Whilst articles often measure multiple facets of a dimension, only seven articles
measure all six dimensions (the average number of dimensions measured is 3.4). There is a
lack of research that demonstrates the contribution of each dimension to IM adoption success.
programs (Ferreira-Vasconcelos, 2008; Snell & White, 2009). IM research has also failed to
demonstrate how these dimensions dynamically interact with each other to collectively affect
employee responses and/or organization performance. IM work also fails to provide insights
into the different phases of IM adoption, the various tactical and strategic steps in each phase
and the role of different functions in them (Papasolomou et al., 2017). As a result, the lack of
unanimity of a ‘roadmap’ for IM adoption prevents firms from understanding the extent to
12
which their existing capabilities are aligned with tactical-level actions that IM work advances
Turning to the outcomes of IM, these can be classified into employee-level (attitudinal and
(Berry & Parasuraman, 1991), increased employee commitment (Yao et al., 2019), employee
empowerment (Gounaris, 2006), higher job satisfaction (Huang & Rundle-Thiele, 2014).
These aforementioned attitudes are also confirmed as drivers of various employee behaviours
including in- and extra-role activity (Lings & Greenley, 2010), citizenship behaviour (Chow et
al., 2015), customer complaint handling performance (Chan & Lam, 2011), customer-oriented
behaviours (Park & Tran, 2018), and brand supportive behaviours (Boukis et al., 2014). In turn,
these drive organizational outcomes. The organizational consequences from IM adoption can
also be divided into two types: financial and non-financial benefits. Financial benefits remain
limited and include profits and market performance (Lings & Greenley, 2009), growth in
income (e.g. Rodrigues and Pinho, 2012), overall profit (e.g. Fang et al., 2014), and sales
growth (e.g. Yu et al., 2019). The non-financial benefits include customer satisfaction (Tortosa-
Edo et al., 2009), staff retention (Yu et al. 2019); service quality (Podnar & Golob, 2010),
brand equity (Boukis & Christodoulides, 2018); customer loyalty (Ozuem et al., 2018),
innovation team performance (Gounaris et al., 2020), and market orientation (e.g. Lings and
Greenley, 2010).
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Table 4 provides frequency data for the four types of IM outcomes in the literature. Attitudinal
outcomes are by far the most commonly measured IM outcomes (61% of articles) reflecting
the employee focus of data collection mentioned earlier. There is a trend to now measure
multiple IM outcomes i.e. at both the employee level and organization level. This is reflected
by the use of structural equation modelling for analysis. However, research on the impact of
IM on organizational financial performance remains very limited (7% of studies) which may
The contextual factors in IM research set the boundary conditions for generalizability. These
are shown in Figure 2. This include the market context in which research was conducted, firm-
In the early stages, IM research concentrated on a few sectors and regions, but
We list the main sectors studies in Table 5. Financial services are the most popular industry
investigated, accounting for 25% of the total studies. The hospitality and tourism industries
have recently grown in popularity as a research context (e.g. Yao et al., 2019), reflecting the
move to a more leisure-based economy in the western world. Education has also emerged as a
fertile research context – perhaps reflecting the relative ease of access. The field still remains
focused on high contact service sectors. Further studies are needed to compare IM effects on
different sectors (e.g. high contact vs. low contact). Manufacturing is only studied infrequently,
suggesting that IM, and the idea of internal customers, is a service-specific framework.
However, with the growth of servitization there is scope for IM research in such sectors.
development of the IM field was located in Europe (e.g. Flipo, 1986; Gummesson, 1987) and
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North America (e.g. Berry, 1981). These two areas accounted for 83% of the emerging research
(with Australia also contributing). In contrast, in the last period, Asia came to the fore with
over 56% of the studies. Also, in the past few years, Africa has emerged as a research context.
The explosion of publications in the IM is very much driven by these developing regions. The
interest in IM amongst western scholars appears to have has tailed off, perhaps reflecting how
The literature also examines several contingent factors that limit or drive the
effectiveness of IM. Individual-level factors include employee tenure (Wieseke et al., 2009),
job type and interpersonal relationship (Yu et al., 2019) network size (Lam et al. 2010). Firm
factors include customer complaints (Bell et al., 2004), feedback accuracy and frequency (Chan
& Lam, 2011), cultural congruence (Burmann et al., 2009), cross-functional connectivity
(Kadic-Maglajilic et al., 2018) and ownership type (Yu et al. 2019). However, there is scope
The analysis of the current state of the IM literature demonstrates that IM as a theory and a
field of research has not developed despite the promise of its early years. There is a lack of a
unified theoretical framework underlying the IM domain (e.g. Ahmed et al., 2003; Kaur et al.,
2013). This leads to a fragmentation of the contribution IM makes to the services marketing
literature. Our systematic review identified 123 mentions of theoretical frameworks. The
majority of papers had no clear theoretical base with the research being more descriptive in
nature and this hinders the take-up of IM in the wider literature. Social Exchange Theory,
Equity Theory and Social Identity Theory are the most widely used frameworks in IM research
(e.g. Tortosa et al., 2009; Suh et al., 2011; Chow et al., 2015). However, these theories, together,
15
The relatively atheoretical nature of the IM discourse renders the emergence of a solid
and unified IM framework as a sine qua non, as it limits its potential to evolve into an inclusive
managerial approach for contemporary organizations. Scholars often criticize the internal
customer perspective, as there are some elements of coercion in the employee market
(Papasolomou, 2006; Boukis et al., 2017). Moreover, prior work questions the legitimacy of
IM as a marketing philosophy, given the overlap of some of its elements with other functions
(e.g. HR) (Collins & Payne 1991). For instance, scholars view IM as “a reemphasis of
normative HRM, and a mere labelling of a concept that was not clearly defined (...), ambiguous
and highly rhetorical” (Gyepi-Garbrah & Asamoah, 2015; p. 276). Future efforts should
delineate IM’s conceptual nature and underlying dimensions and integrate this with
The following section provides an agenda with some important challenges that need to
be addressed in the field if IM is going rise again, provide a significant contribution to academic
theory and demonstrate its importance for contemporary service organizations. In the past, IM
research has focused on front-line service employees in traditional service sectors assessing the
impact of an ever-changing set of IM dimensions (the services marketing mix). This agenda
suggests widening the focus of IM research away from its sole focus on the frontline employee;
conceptualizing IM as a dynamic capability and using big data to optimize this capability; and
the focal point of the majority of IM studies is narrowly frontline staff and/or sales reps
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(Akroush et al., 2013; Park & Tran, 2018). This suggests that the explanatory power of existing
IM theories and frameworks (e.g. equity, social exchange theory) is limited and it mostly lies
IM should not be the remit of, or focused on, one department but be considered an
al., 2009). Behaviours such as good service and customer responsiveness should percolate
confirm IM’s delivery of value to all internal stakeholders (e.g. senior executives, back-office
staff, middle-level managers, etc.) and take into account situational factors such as the
relationship between co-workers (Chow et al., 2015) and the communication modes utilized
among employees. Given the trend for increased virtual and remote working, and the potential
for low employee engagement, these factors may be gaining importance in IM effectiveness.
However, not all types of jobs are equally attractive for employees and often,
employees have a strictly calculative perspective for narrowly defined roles (Lips-Wiersma et
their work role (Kelemen & Papasolomou, 2007). IM programs that treat all employees equally
could end up a very resource-consuming activity with ambiguous results for firms.
Additionally, there may be limits to the effectiveness of IM. For example, job empowerment
has been confirmed to lead to perceived workload increase, impeding employee performance
departments or at different organizational levels? What is the role of the leaders and
17
colleagues in enhancing employees’ responsiveness to IM programs? What are the situational
Extensive research shows that IM elicits positive responses in turns of higher commitment or
engagement in citizenship activity (e.g. Chow et al., 2015; Chan & Lam, 2011). The theoretical
framework shown in Figure 2 suggests that the employee responses mediate between IM and
indirectly) to other (internal and external) aspects of organizational effectiveness, such as more
operational efficiency (e.g. Lings & Greenley, 2010; Edo et al., 2015; Park & Tran, 2018).
Moreover, there is no strong empirical confirmation that IM actually creates value for the
firm’s customers (Lings & Greenley, 2010) and measures of financial performance remain rare
in the literature. As a result, practitioners lack an informed understanding of the benefits to the
firm from IM adoption. Research needs to expand to include the customer’s perspective,
The current theoretical grounds of IM also fail to address the rationale behind
exchanges between firm and employees and a comprehensive understanding of how employee-
firm value proposition exchanges occur is still missing (Papasolomou et al., 2017). The service
logic stream advocates that employees should be enacted as operant resources in the value co-
creation process and stress them as key actors in the creation of value for customers (Tsai &
Wu, 2011; Grönroos, 2011). However, how value creation in the internal market occurs and
the role of employees as co-creators in this process remains largely unexplored in the IM
employee acquisition, retention and their experience with the firm? How does IM adoption
18
affect customer satisfaction level and reviews valence? Do employee responses fully or
capabilities encourage employees to actively participate in extra-role tasks that create value
for the firm? To what extent do IM programs motivate employees to engage in value co-
The dynamic capabilities framework can be utilized to build a clearer theoretical stand of the
IM domain at the strategic level (Pavlou & El Sawy, 2011). As underlying IM practices
constitute key processes to the performance of service organisations, they reflect their capacity
to modify human resources to improve their effective functioning (Boukis, 2019). Hence, IM
practices reflect capabilities that allow the management of the firm’s internal (human)
resources and processes in such a way that employees become better aligned to the company’s
customer objectives.
know which dimensions should be emphasised, and which are most effective under which
demonstrate how these dimensions dynamically interact with each other to collectively affect
the vision and goals to pursue, and the senior management develop strategies, policies and
procedures to deliver value for the internal market. Internal intelligence collection and internal
communication dimensions represent the marketing perspective (Gounaris, 2006; Lings &
and retaining the right people in right roles by building financial and relational bonds with them
(e.g. Hwang & Chi, 2005). The job design and empowerment dimension lie on the overlap of
19
marketing perspective and HRM perspective; from the marketing perspective, job design as
the response of internal market intelligence collection and communication; and, from the HRM
Research has shown these dimensions to influence and interact with each other. For
example, firms collect information about training needs through internal market research, and
then develop training and development programs targeting on responding to the collected
supports the two-way information-flow between employees and employers (Kim et al., 2016).
emphasised? Which dimensions support and mutually reinforcing each other? Is there an
their reliance on surveys to understand employees and their needs (Edo et a., 2015). The
abundance of employee data on review sites (e.g. Glassdoor) and social media (e.g. LinkedIn)
as well as the development of organizational big data analytics skills and AI (Rialti et al., 2019),
in response to the massive generation of employee behavioural data from firms’ internal
systems (Gupta et al., 2020), have enabled organizations to optimize their human resource-
are more empowered to voice their opinions on social media (e.g. Glassdoor), impacting both
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customers and employees (potential or existing). Such response could be a fruitful measure of
IM effectiveness.
This “big data”-driven understanding of employees’ behaviour along with the increased
AI capabilities that firms develop could result in some important changes for IM adoption and
widen its implementation scope (Boukis, 2019; Rialti et al., 2019). Leveraging big data to
inform an IM capability will offer better predictive analytics and a more customized
employees’ retention rates over time and across departments? How do aspects of IM affect
employees’ creativity and role efficiency? What is the role of IM programmes in employees’
behavioural engagement with their role in different organizational functions? How should
learning and development experiences? What is the short- and long-term impact of IM
programs on brand equity, and the role employee’s social media use within this?
core service industries such as financial services, tourism and health (Mukherjee & Malhotra,
2006; Tsai & Wu, 2011). Research should provide more inclusive IM conceptualizations
applicable to a wider range of sectors (e.g. professional services and manufacturing markets in
general). The “one size fits all” approach is far from optimal, and more understanding is needed
as to how an IM capability should change to fit the nature of the organization. For instance,
markedly different from that in large organizations. More importantly the radical changes of
the service market landscape, notably the adoption of technology to augment or substitute of
21
service personnel and the emergence of the gig economy, questions the current understanding
In many industries, technology replaced the employees as the service provider (Rust &
Huang, 2014). As automated service delivery and chatbots become an integral part of firm-
(Bowen, 2016). The ubiquity of the online environment and social media allow service
organisations to reach their customers without any frontline employee intervention (Klaus &
Nguyen, 2013). In many cases, strategies involving the mechanisation of services relegate
employees to a secondary role and promote consumers to the primary role in service delivery
(Leeflang et al., 2014). This suggests that the impact of IM may be curtailed, or at least needs
to be reformulated or refocused.
working status and physical interactions with their employer and customers (Podnar & Golob,
2010). Firms, and often employees, opt-in for more flexible work arrangements, changing
traditional distinctions in employment types and giving rise to some newer contractual
arrangements (e.g. on-demand contracts) and different forms of employment flexibility (e.g.
remote employees) (Tran & Sokas, 2017). The gig economy embraces 150 million workers in
North America and Western Europe, and it is increasingly being used by a large proportion of
employers are increasingly evident in sharing economy markets (i.e. Uber drivers who also
work for Lyft), resulting in the assertation that ‘employee loyalty is dead in the gig economy’
(Mosca, 2019). This begs the question as to whether IM is still relevant in these markets.
multifarious IM practices remain effective across different industries? And within specific
22
contexts such as start-ups or SMEs? To what extent does IM adoption remain beneficial for
extent does IM remain relevant in a sharing economy context, where flexible working
relationships, employment with multiple firms and work-on-demand constitute vital elements
of one’s work?
Our systematic review offers some useful insights and directions for practitioners. First,
move toward assessing the ROI of each of its underlying practices for different aspects of
employees’ (e.g. creativity, efficiency, citizenship) and firm’s performance (e.g. financial or
innovation). This big-data enabled approach should generate proxies that provide HR managers
with a better understanding of the internal firm’s climate and employees’ aggregate experience
with their employer. Second, the idea of accommodating individual employee needs and wants
into the strategic orientation of organizations that the IM advances should be at the forefront
influential in the firm’s strategic functioning is likely to create more value for them and make
them more prone in participating actively in value-adding activities either for the organization
(e.g. ideation, feedback) or its customers (e.g. customer consciousness). Overall, our insights
could help businesses move towards a dynamic, value creation-orientated and big data-enabled
understanding of their internal markets, allowing them to utilize IM practices to attract, retain
CONCLUSION
IM research has advanced considerably since the early 80s conceptualizations. This literature
stream has generated a relatively rich but fragmented body of research, pointing in disparate
23
directions, which only allows practitioners and scholars with a marginal understanding of the
conceptualizing IM. Empirical evidence repeatedly demonstrates the narrow landscape of the
IM literature focusing on particular traditional service sectors (e.g. financial service), rarely
Responding to the fragmentation and ambiguity in the IM research, and the changing
reality for service employees in contemporary global marketplaces (Bowen, 2016), this article
aspires to provide a critical inquiry into the IM discourse. Through this review, this work
contributes to the ongoing debate about the concept and the scope of IM as well as gives
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Tables
Economics,
0 0.00% 0 0.00% 3 3.37% 2 2.20% 5
Econometrics
Public Sector
2 2.47% 0 0.00% 1 1.12% 1 1.10% 4
and Health Care
38
Table 3. Statistical Distribution of IM Dimensions across the four periods
Ennui
Emergence Establishing Explosion
2017- Total
IM Before 2007 2007-2012 2013-2016
Onwards Chi-sq test
Dimension
N
s No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) (%)
o.
Internal
6(8.2 17.1 17(16 24.6 18(17 23.6 19(17 25.0 23.4 χ2= 0.934;
Market 60
)1 4% .2) 4% .8) 8% .8) 0% 4% n.s
Analytics
Internal
27(30 77.1 54(59 78.2 69(65 90.7 71(65 93.4 22 86.3 χ2= 10.828; p
Communic
.2) 4% .6) 6% .6) 9% .6) 2% 1 3% < .05
ation
Employee
18(21 51.4 41(43 59.4 45(47 59.2 56(47 73.6 16 62.5 χ2= 6.517;
Developm
.9) 3% .1) 2% .5) 1% .5) 8% 0 0% n.s
ent
Employee
Rewards
18(17 37(34 29(37 42(37 12 49.2 χ2= 5.435;
and
.2) 51.4 .0) 53.6 .4) 38.1 .4) 55.2 6 2% n.s
Recognitio
n 3% 2% 6% 6%
Job Design
and 24(21 41(42 51(47 43(47 15 62.1 χ2= 2.627;
Empower .7) 68.5 .9) 59.4 .2) 67.1 .2) 56.5 9 1% n.s
ment 7% 2% 1% 8%
Leadership
and
19(19 46(39 36(43 44(43 14 56.6 χ2= 5.612;
Organizati
.8) 54.2 .1) 66.6 .0) 47.3 .0) 57.8 5 4% n.s
onal
Culture 9% 7% 7% 9%
No. of 25
35 69 76 76
articles 6
1.Cell numbers: Observed (expected)
39
Table 4. Statistical Distribution of IM Outcomes across the four periods
Ennui
Emergence Establishing Explosion
2017- Total
Before 2007 2007-2012 2013-2016 Chi-
IM Outcomes Onwards
sq test
N
No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) (%)
o.
Employee χ2 =
20(21. 57.14 38(41. 55.07 51(46. 67.11 46(46. 60.53 15 60.55
Attitudinal 2.404;
2)1 % 8) % 0) % 0) % 5 %
Outcomes n.s
Employee χ2 =
20.00 18(17. 26.09 19(19. 25.00 20(19. 26.32 25.00
Behavioural 7(8.8) 64 0.580;
% 3) % 0) % 0) % %
Outcomes n.s
Organizational χ2 =
10(11. 28.57 23(22. 33.33 25(24. 32.89 26(24. 34.21 32.81
Non-Financial 84 0.362;
5) % 6) % 9) % 9) % %
Outcomes n.s
Organizational χ2 =
5.71 10.14 5.26 6.58 7.03
Financial 2(2.5) 7(4.9) 4(5.3) 5(5.3) 18 1.503;
% % % % %
Outcomes n.s
25
No. of articles 35 69 76 76
6
1.Cell numbers: Observed (expected)
Financial 29.09
16 22 26.83% 20 24.39% 17 21.25% 75 25.08%
Services %
Hospitality & 9.09
5 16 19.51% 18 21.95% 18 22.50% 57 19.06%
Tourism %
14.55
Health care 8 9 10.98% 12 14.63% 8 10.00% 37 12.37%
%
Manufacturin 5.45
3 8 9.76% 5 6.10% 7 8.75% 23 7.69%
g %
0.00
Education 0 3 3.66% 6 7.32% 12 15.00% 21 7.02%
%
16.36
Mixed sectors 9 10 12.20% 3 3.66% 7 8.75% 29 9.70%
%
Other/unspeci 25.45
14 14 17.07% 18 21.9% 11 13.75% 56 18.72%
fied %
100.00
Total 55 82 82 80 299
%
40
Figures
Figure 1. Key IM Dimensions Identified in Literature
41
Figure 2. IM Outcomes and Contextual Factors
42
Figure 3. Future Research Agenda for IM
43