Posts Tagged ‘employee’

Stress, Emotional Labor and Information Technology Workers

Monday, February 8th, 2010

All too often people in other divisions of a business believe that information technology practitioners are horrible communicators. Many clients hold the same opinion. I’ve been working on a project examining communication, stress and emotional labor regarding front line IT workers and have found this belief to be wrong in both theory and practice. The research makes a number of contributions to organizational research, particularly regarding the IT profession. First, through interviews I studied the stories of those living and working in the IT profession, providing a more complete picture of previous statistical analysis regarding stressors, burnout and communication. Second, I examined how department-wide communication may lead to employee disidentification and eventual turnover.

These interviews illustrate that managerial communication is of paramount importance to IT employees, as is follow-through by the management. Negative perceived organizational support is constituted through organizational and managerial communicative practices. The lack of managerial support is one facet of the IT professionals working lives, exemplified by the personal disconfirmation by management of performed work. No IT employee wants to be disrespected, especially when that disrespect comes from a manager or superior who does not understand the fundamentals of the IT job.

Many scholars continue to insist that good communication is necessary in organizations. “Good” communication is seen as effective, open, clear, and concise However, Eisenberg (2007) noted that clear communication is not necessarily beneficial in all cases. Clear communication used by IT management was neither interpersonally beneficial within the superior-subordinate dyad, nor advantageous for IT professionals’ organizational identification.

Likewise, it has been proposed that increased integration within organizational communication networks is positively related to organizational commitment. As boundary-spanners the IT professionals are highly integrated in networks with other members in the university. However, this research suggests that working across occupational culture boundaries, and the continual need to perform emotional labor, may be a variable that mitigates the positive influence of network integration on employee commitment and turnover.

Emotional labor certainly applies to interactions between IT professionals as they work with their customers or clients. IT professionals frequently encounter situations where dissatisfaction, annoyance, and frustration are likely to be the dominant emotions, leading them to enact emotion work as part of their position. IT professionals are required to display only emotions that are part of their work role: technological adeptness, pleasantness, and cheerfulness, while hiding emotions of anger, disdain, and irritation. They display organizationally desired emotions during unpleasant situations in the front stage, regulating and relegating negative performances including outbursts of anger and negative story-telling to the backstage, either alone or in tandem with only other IT professionals.

These incidents also make crystal clear the authority and power structures of institutions like universities. The power relationship between IT professionals and tenured faculty is deeply asymmetrical. For the IT professional there are few options for angry replies, questioning or confronting a faculty member. The various power relationships affect everyday performances. The important point in this study is that IT professionals work in one occupational culture, yet as boundary-spanners they come into contact with clients who work in a different occupational culture.

IT professionals recognize the power differentials between their positions and the positions of faculty members. Most faculty and IT professionals come into contact when a problem needs correcting. In many instances this situation causes a lot of inconvenience for both sides as the issue needs to be resolved under time pressure. IT professionals do not voice their frustrations to the faculty members, but rather they enact emotional labor, showing the requisite approved emotional displays in the frontstage.

In studies of power, scholars traditionally recognize five different types of overt power: reward, coercive, referent, expert and legitimate. Even thought IT professionals possess expert knowledge, they do not have the coercive, referent, reward, or legitimate power that being tenured or on the tenure track engenders for faculty. The power distance between IT professionals and faculty mitigates any challenge to the latter’s actions or authority. The ethos of the academic institution gives faculty massive latitude to behave as they wish towards IT staff, but does not give the same latitude to staff members. Technology professionals working in the front lines are aware how and where power in the university resides.

Does ROWE Really Work?

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

What is ROWE?

ROWE (Results-Only Work Environment): ROWE in practice means “each person is free to do whatever they want, whenever they want as long as the work gets done.” Employees control their own calendars, and are not required to be in the office if they can complete their tasks elsewhere. It is generally accepted that there are times when collocation will be necessary. Under normal circumstances, work when and where you like.

Who is using ROWE?

The most widely known adopter is none other than Best Buy. Brad Anderson, CEO of Best Buy, agreed with the work culture change so much that he wrote the forward to the CultureRx book entitled, “Why Work Sucks and How to Fix It”. Finding additional companies using ROWE is a bit harder. I have made inquiries to get more examples that will be shared when they become available. A company that I work for has implemented a version of ROWE in the Information Services department. I would estimate that over 75 people participate in the ongoing program.

UPDATE: I’ve gotten in touch with Cali and Jodi, the originators of ROWE, and they have informed me that J.A. Counter & Associates are another company that uses ROWE. A larger list of organizations are due to be published within a month’s time. So, expect further updates when the info is released.

So, Does It Work?

Short answer: yes. We have employed ROWE for well over a year. Employee satisfaction has increased an order of magnitude. That said, ROWE is not a cure all. You will still find many annoying drawbacks that plague most organizations. How to address them may well lay outside of the issues ROWE addresses. Employees truly love the benefits that ROWE does provide.

Stumbling Blocks

  • Abusers. These are in the extreme minority. Fear not. Their performance will be the tell-tale that exposes abuse of the ROWE system. Afterall, if the results based on performance are poor and the excuses many, it will quickly become apparent that the individual is not playing by the rules. Solution? Temporarily revoke those ROWE rights. You’ll be amazed at just how quickly performance improves to win back ROWE privileges.
  • Reduced osmotic communication. I talked at length about this in another article. It is a real issue. The benefits FAR outweigh the introduction of this problem. Solution? Find tools that emulate osmotic communication and fit into your company’s way of doing business.
  • The death of camaraderie. Well, sort of. Nobody likes fabricated situations. Isn’t it awkward when the company forces people without a mutual social interest to participate in personal and social team building exercises? Yes. Yes, it is. Solution? People who genuinely like one another will naturally gravitate. With ROWE, this often takes the form of coffee shop sit-ins, living room office parties and the infamous happy hours. Be sure to have the occasional meeting so that new employees meet existing ones and new relationships can be formed face-to-face.
  • The work/home blur. This does seem to occur occasionally. If you are working at strange hours, there are times when it is hard to differentiate between the two. The clear separation becomes a little vague. Solution? Managers are warned not to take advantage of this. Let your employees live their lives. Employees should expect that their companies may contact them during normal business hours and that they should respond during those hours.
  • Manager fear. The irrational belief by managers that they will no longer be needed. Especially troublesome to the micro manager whose personality traits desire control. Solution? Educate. Managers will find that coordination is still greatly needed in a ROWE enabled workforce. Relax and let go. Managers who trust their direct reports will always get better results than those who do not.

Benefits

  • Productivity increases. People using ROWE got more done in less time.
  • Goodbye, commute.
  • More time dedicated to personal life. This is healthy. This brings joy. Happy employees are productive. Productivity increases. And so forth…
  • Employee retention. ROWE is hard to give up once you’ve experienced it. Employees have a tendency to stay put.

Conclusion

If there are segments of your workforce that are candidates for ROWE, you owe it to yourself (and them!) to seriously consider making the change. The employee satisfaction and increased productivity are reason enough to make a trial run at the minimum. ROWE pays dividends and costs organizations very little to implement.


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