Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/118260
Title: Too mindful to be bored? A dynamic lens on state mindfulness among hospitality frontline employees
Authors: Fan, Y 
Wang, X 
Yan, J 
Kucukusta, D 
Issue Date: Jun-2026
Source: Tourism management, June 2026, v. 114, 105385
Abstract: Given the dynamic service environment, hospitality frontline employees require mindfulness to manage unpredictable customers’ demands. Departing from prior research that has primarily focused on trait mindfulness, this study draws on Conservation of Resources theory to elucidate how state mindfulness, as a crucial psychological resource, alleviates employee boredom experiences and work withdrawal. Moreover, this study introduces work meaningfulness into its investigation of state mindfulness and reveals that employees perceiving their work as less meaningful may derive more benefits from state mindfulness, as evidenced by the more obvious reduction in boredom observed following state mindfulness. Experience sampling data from 111 hotel employees over 10 workdays supported the hypotheses through multilevel regression analysis. By shifting the focus to the dynamic effects of mindfulness, this study advances the mindfulness literature and encourages hospitality managers to leverage state mindfulness to reduce employee boredom experiences and work withdrawal.
Keywords: Employee boredom experience
Employee state mindfulness
Work meaningfulness
Work withdrawal
Publisher: Pergamon Press
Journal: Tourism management 
ISSN: 0261-5177
EISSN: 1879-3193
DOI: 10.1016/j.tourman.2025.105385
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

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Embargo End Date 2029-06-30
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