|
Study Says Telecommuting May Harm Workers Left Behind in the Office
First-of-its-kind research addresses impact of
virtual work on non-teleworkers
Troy, N.Y. — As telecommuting and other forms of virtual
work become increasingly popular, what happens to the workers
who are left behind in the office? A new study by a management
professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute suggests that the
prevalence of telecommuters in an office can adversely impact
coworkers who do not telecommute in terms of their job
satisfaction and likelihood that they will leave the
company.
Telework, also known as telecommuting, is a form of virtual
work that entails working some portion of the week away from
the conventional workplace — typically from home — and
communicating via computer-based technology. Today, about 37
percent of U.S.-based and foreign companies offer flexible work
arrangements such as telework and telecommuting, and the
programs are growing at 11 percent per year, according to a
report by the Society of Human Resource Management.
“The complex interplay between work and family life has been
a topic of immense research, both in the private and academic
communities,” said Timothy Golden, associate professor in the
Lally School of Management & Technology at Rensselaer. “As
a result, interest and research in telework as a work modality
to ease conflicts between work and family domains has grown
tremendously. Studies to date however, have investigated
telework’s impacts on the teleworker’s themselves, rather than
on those who work with teleworkers but remain in the office.
This study shifts the research lens to investigate the impacts
of telework on non-teleworkers in the office.”
Golden studied a sample of 240 professional employees from a
medium size company. He found that the greater the prevalence
of teleworkers in an office, the less others in the office are
apt to be satisfied with their jobs, with a corresponding
decrease in the probability that they will remain with the
company.
Golden cautions, however, that while these results are
scientifically measurable, they may be influenced by a variety
of other important factors. For instance, Golden’s study
indicates that other influential factors may come into play to
increase or decrease the impact on job satisfaction and
intentions to leave the company, such as the amount of time
co-workers telework, the extent of face-to-face interactions,
and the amount of job autonomy given to employees. The findings
were published in a recent issue of the journal Human
Relations.
So why does this happen? The research suggests several
reasons. Non-teleworkers who are less satisfied with co-workers
may tend to find the workplace less enjoyable, have fewer and
weaker emotional ties to co-workers, and generally feel less
obligated to the organization.
“While reasons for the adverse impact on non-teleworker’s
satisfaction are varied, it potentially could be due to
coworker’s perceptions that they have decreased flexibility and
a higher workload, and the ensuing greater frustration that
comes with coordinating in an environment with more extensive
co-worker telework,” suggests Golden.
“In addition, it may be that with a greater prevalence of
teleworkers in a work unit, non-teleworkers may find it less
personally fulfilling to conduct their work due to the
increased obstacles to building and maintaining effective and
rewarding co-worker relationships,” added Golden.
The results of the study suggest that managers may be able
to help mitigate some of the adverse impact by ensuring greater
face-to-face contact between co-workers when employees are in
the office, and granting greater job autonomy to accomplish
work activities as employees see fit.
“In terms of managing the human resources within an
organization, there is little doubt that one’s role in work
life impacts one’s role in the family. However, organizational
decision makers need to take into account the broader impact of
telework on others in the office, particularly within
team-based work environments, and exercise caution when
implementing or expanding this work mode based purely on
individual desires to telework,” Golden said.
Golden has been researching the impacts of flexible work
arrangements for nearly a decade. His research examines the
implications of the rapidly expanding availability and use of
technology within business organizations. Golden also
investigates the behavioral, relational, and attitudinal
implications of technology-driven organizational innovations in
the way individuals work. He teaches courses in the areas of
talent management, team life-cycle dynamics, organizational
change, and employee motivation.
About Rensselaer’s Lally School
Rensselaer’s Lally School of Management and
Technology was founded in 1963 as an integral part of
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, the nation’s oldest
degree-granting technological university. Building on
Rensselaer’s heritage of more than 182 years of leadership in
science and engineering, the Lally School is dedicated to
advancing business through innovation. The Lally School’s
curriculum is designed to produce leaders who combine creative
passion with the ability to integrate technology across
business functions. The faculty emphasizes the value of
hands-on experience available through campus resources such as
the Severino Center for Technological Entrepreneurship and the
nation’s first on-campus business incubator. Rensselaer’s Lally
School offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs in
management, doctoral programs in management and technology, an
Executive MBA program, and a joint Sino-U.S. MBA for companies
operating in China. For more information on the Lally School,
go to www.lallyschool.rpi.edu.
|
Published
January 8,
2008 |
Contact: Jessica Otitigbe
Phone: (518) 276-6050
E-mail: otitij@rpi.edu |
|