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Thriving or surviving? How the physical work setting at home was experienced globally during COVID-19

Toivonen, Saija ; Blind, Ina LU and Kyrö, Riikka LU (2022) III TWR Transdisciplinary Workplace Research Conference 2022 2022. p.346-354
Abstract
One of the most prominent and widely adopted COVID-19 countermeasures globally was the recommendation to work from home for all non-essential workers. Working from home (WFH) already entails many challenges, including difficulties in maintaining a healthy work-life balance. Moreover, the COVID-19 enforced remote working differed from planned remote work, as it was unplanned and involuntary, not based on individual work activities, and excluded the use of third places. This study aims to establish how, on a global scale, demographics, time with company, and
the social and physical work setting at home affected employees’ satisfaction with their physical work setting during the pandemic. The study employs a quantitative research approach... (More)
One of the most prominent and widely adopted COVID-19 countermeasures globally was the recommendation to work from home for all non-essential workers. Working from home (WFH) already entails many challenges, including difficulties in maintaining a healthy work-life balance. Moreover, the COVID-19 enforced remote working differed from planned remote work, as it was unplanned and involuntary, not based on individual work activities, and excluded the use of third places. This study aims to establish how, on a global scale, demographics, time with company, and
the social and physical work setting at home affected employees’ satisfaction with their physical work setting during the pandemic. The study employs a quantitative research approach utilizing secondary data comprising 137,289 respondents from 77 countries globally. Employees’ experienced suitability of their physical work setting at home are regressed on demographic factors (age, gender), time with company, presence of others at home, type of work space, satisfaction with desk and chair, access to IT devices and tools, and country, using a linear probability model.
The study finds that the majority of the respondents globally, ca 61%, felt that their physical work setting at home was suitable. Women had a higher probability of being satisfied than men, and older employees a higher probability of satisfaction than younger employees. Recent recruits also had a higher probability of satisfaction. The presence of family members reduced the probability of satisfaction, presence of friends and flatmates even more so. No having a dedicated work room also reduced the probability of satisfaction, while satisfaction with desk, chair and access to IT
devices and tools had a large positive effect. This study is among of the first to analyse employee experiences during COVID-19 on a truly global scale. As hybrid work continues to gain foothold, our findings are useful workplace managers in the post-pandemic era. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Proceedings of the 3rd Transdisciplinary Workplace Research Conference
editor
Tagliaro, Chiara ; Migliore, Alessandra and Silvestri, Rossella
volume
2022
pages
346 - 354
publisher
TWR Network
conference name
III TWR Transdisciplinary Workplace Research Conference 2022
conference location
Milano, Italy
conference dates
2022-09-07 - 2022-09-10
ISBN
978-88-909641-8-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
04f46a1b-3a53-406a-ba5e-3c7c01ac14fb
date added to LUP
2022-10-27 10:19:51
date last changed
2022-10-31 10:18:16
@inproceedings{04f46a1b-3a53-406a-ba5e-3c7c01ac14fb,
  abstract     = {{One of the most prominent and widely adopted COVID-19 countermeasures globally was the recommendation to work from home for all non-essential workers. Working from home (WFH) already entails many challenges, including difficulties in maintaining a healthy work-life balance. Moreover, the COVID-19 enforced remote working differed from planned remote work, as it was unplanned and involuntary, not based on individual work activities, and excluded the use of third places. This study aims to establish how, on a global scale, demographics, time with company, and<br/>the social and physical work setting at home affected employees’ satisfaction with their physical work setting during the pandemic. The study employs a quantitative research approach utilizing secondary data comprising 137,289 respondents from 77 countries globally. Employees’ experienced suitability of their physical work setting at home are regressed on demographic factors (age, gender), time with company, presence of others at home, type of work space, satisfaction with desk and chair, access to IT devices and tools, and country, using a linear probability model.<br/>The study finds that the majority of the respondents globally, ca 61%, felt that their physical work setting at home was suitable. Women had a higher probability of being satisfied than men, and older employees a higher probability of satisfaction than younger employees. Recent recruits also had a higher probability of satisfaction. The presence of family members reduced the probability of satisfaction, presence of friends and flatmates even more so. No having a dedicated work room also reduced the probability of satisfaction, while satisfaction with desk, chair and access to IT<br/>devices and tools had a large positive effect. This study is among of the first to analyse employee experiences during COVID-19 on a truly global scale. As hybrid work continues to gain foothold, our findings are useful workplace managers in the post-pandemic era.}},
  author       = {{Toivonen, Saija and Blind, Ina and Kyrö, Riikka}},
  booktitle    = {{Proceedings of the 3rd Transdisciplinary Workplace Research Conference}},
  editor       = {{Tagliaro, Chiara and Migliore, Alessandra and Silvestri, Rossella}},
  isbn         = {{978-88-909641-8-3}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{346--354}},
  publisher    = {{TWR Network}},
  title        = {{Thriving or surviving? How the physical work setting at home was experienced globally during COVID-19}},
  volume       = {{2022}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}