TY - JOUR
T1 - Disentangling the implications of teleworking on work–life balance
T2 - a serial mediation analysis through motivation and satisfaction
AU - Palumbo, Rocco
AU - Flamini, Giulia
AU - Gnan, Luca
AU - Pellegrini, Massimiliano Matteo
AU - Petrolo, Damiano
AU - Fakhar Manesh, Mohammad
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - Purpose: Literature is not consistent in discussing the implications of teleworking on work–life balance (WLB). Even though teleworking may enhance work arrangements’ flexibility, it blurs boundaries between life and work, endangering the individual WLB. The paper intends to illuminate this issue, moving forward our understanding of teleworking’s implications using the Social Exchange Theory framework. Design/methodology/approach: Secondary data were collected from Eurofound’s sixth European Working Condition Survey. A large sample of Europeans (n = 16,473) was involved in this study. The authors designed a serial mediation analysis to investigate the direct and indirect effects of teleworking on WLB. The authors included employees’ job motivation and job satisfaction as intervening variables that mediate the relationship between teleworking and WLB. Findings: The authors found teleworking to negatively affect WLB, putting under stress the teleworkers’ ability to handle the interplay between work and life. However, the serial mediation analysis pointed out that teleworking triggers an improvement of job motivation, which, in turn, boosts job satisfaction. Increased job motivation and job satisfaction nurture positive employees’ perception of WLB. Practical implications: The study results invite us to pay attention to the complex interplay between teleworking and WLB, emphasizing the mediating role of job motivation and job satisfaction. As a flexible work arrangement, teleworking may increase the employees’ sense of control over their work, which leads to better perceived WLB. However, confounding the boundaries between work and daily life, it may nourish work-to-life and life-to-work conflicts. Originality/value: This paper advances what is currently known about teleworking’s implications on WLB, envisioning avenues for further conceptual and empirical developments.
AB - Purpose: Literature is not consistent in discussing the implications of teleworking on work–life balance (WLB). Even though teleworking may enhance work arrangements’ flexibility, it blurs boundaries between life and work, endangering the individual WLB. The paper intends to illuminate this issue, moving forward our understanding of teleworking’s implications using the Social Exchange Theory framework. Design/methodology/approach: Secondary data were collected from Eurofound’s sixth European Working Condition Survey. A large sample of Europeans (n = 16,473) was involved in this study. The authors designed a serial mediation analysis to investigate the direct and indirect effects of teleworking on WLB. The authors included employees’ job motivation and job satisfaction as intervening variables that mediate the relationship between teleworking and WLB. Findings: The authors found teleworking to negatively affect WLB, putting under stress the teleworkers’ ability to handle the interplay between work and life. However, the serial mediation analysis pointed out that teleworking triggers an improvement of job motivation, which, in turn, boosts job satisfaction. Increased job motivation and job satisfaction nurture positive employees’ perception of WLB. Practical implications: The study results invite us to pay attention to the complex interplay between teleworking and WLB, emphasizing the mediating role of job motivation and job satisfaction. As a flexible work arrangement, teleworking may increase the employees’ sense of control over their work, which leads to better perceived WLB. However, confounding the boundaries between work and daily life, it may nourish work-to-life and life-to-work conflicts. Originality/value: This paper advances what is currently known about teleworking’s implications on WLB, envisioning avenues for further conceptual and empirical developments.
KW - Job motivation
KW - Job satisfaction
KW - Teleworking
KW - Work-life balance
KW - Working arrangements
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85112170034&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/JOEPP-08-2020-0156
DO - 10.1108/JOEPP-08-2020-0156
M3 - Article
SN - 2051-6614
VL - 9
SP - 68
EP - 88
JO - Journal of Organizational Effectiveness
JF - Journal of Organizational Effectiveness
IS - 1
ER -