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- Title
MASS-PRODUCTION OF PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AND PSEUDO-PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY IN TAX PREPARATION WORK.
- Authors
GALPERIN, ROMAN V.
- Abstract
How is mass-production of professional services possible? Since professional services are credence goods, consumers rely on signals of expertise, like credentials and professional behavior of the service provider, to assess the quality and value of the service. Yet economies of scale in mass-production require nonprofessional workforce, which lacks the expected professional credentials and appears to be poorly equipped to project expert authority. Moreover, the low-wage, low-discretion job conditions of mass-production are antithetical to the ideal of professional work and thus seem to provide poor incentives for assuming and maintaining professional identity. By analyzing a case of contemporary tax preparation work in the United States, this paper argues that nonprofessional workers assume and project expert authority while delivering mass-produced professional services, despite the poor job conditions. Aspects of worker selection, training, and interactions with clients, as well as a firm's efforts to project a professional image, are identified as factors contributing to the emergence and the maintenance of expert authority in nonprofessional workers. The distinction between structural and cultural aspects of professionalism is discussed as a promising direction for studying professionalism in nonprofessional workers and relating job design to worker identity.
- Subjects
PROFESSIONS; NONPROFESSIONAL occupations; PROFESSIONALISM; WORK design; MASS production
- Publication
Academy of Management Discoveries, 2017, Vol 3, Issue 2, p208
- ISSN
2168-1007
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5465/amd.2015.0164