By Ines Spieler, Susanne Scheibe, Christian Stamov Roßnagel and Arvid Kappas
Flexible working time arrangements are becoming increasingly popular around the globe – but do they really work? In Europe, up to 40 per cent of employees may schedule their working hours at their discretion. This ‘flextime’ is thought to help meet ever-increasing job demands and strike a balance between work and life. Yet, researchers know surprisingly little about the circumstances in which flextime has the desired effects. Less is more, our findings reveal that those who use flexible schedules, only now and again might reap its benefits and avoid its turning into a hindrance.
If work and life clash too much, they may not only bring down work satisfaction and job performance rather they might also put satisfaction with marriage and family on the line, cause bodily symptoms, lead to substance abuse, and even depression.
Global competition, technological progress, and demographic change are driving up the job demands of the modern workplace. Add childcare needs and elderly parents to look after, and you will see why flexible working hours count as one way to help employees to juggle work and life while keeping up with job demands. And work-life balance is more than a mere feel-good matter.
[su_pullquote align=”right”]If work and life clash too much, they may not only bring down work satisfaction and job performance rather they might also put satisfaction with marriage and family on the line, cause bodily symptoms, lead to substance abuse, and even depression.[/su_pullquote].
Luckily, several studies suggest that being able to flexibly arrange working hours is beneficial for well-being, health, work–life balance, as well as job performance and job satisfaction, while keeping absenteeism low. More and more companies act on these findings and offer their employees flextime. Most employees no longer hold the traditional nine-to-five job. Instead, working time is increasingly flexible. That said, having access to flexible time arrangements doesn’t mean everyone uses it to the same extent, let alone to the same extent every day, rather it needs active management.
Should you establish a general routine when to start and finish your work and when to take breaks, or just ‘play it by ear’ every day? Should you take an extra work break to meet up with your spouse for coffee in order to get that conflict from last night out of the way? Should you stay at the office to finish a project at the price of not getting enough sleep? By using flextime people move around the boundaries they set in their professional and private life and how they shield the work sphere from private hassles, or whether work matters are kept from spilling over into ‘the home zone’.
Till date, there has been no clear way of telling how to best manage work time flexibility, but our research now sheds a brighter light onto how employees do it. Using one-off questionnaires, most research has taken a ‘snapshot’ of people’s flextime use.
[su_pullquote]Using flextime only occasionally when really needed, while keeping up regular working hours on most days, may be the golden strategy to reap the most benefits from flexible working time arrangements.[/su_pullquote]
What we did comes closer to ‘shooting a film’ of flextime management. We tracked employees’ use of their time on a daily basis for two weeks and looked at the effects on work-life boundaries and daily well-being. In two studies with 758 staffers from different types of companies we found that using flextime helped them ‘keep the office out’ of home in terms of stronger boundaries around one’s private life domain – and those stronger boundaries went with higher levels of emotional well-being and that uplifting effect even lasted into the next day.
More importantly, however, employees differed widely in how often they used flextime overall across the two weeks – and this clearly played a role in achieving their work goals. Occasionally, they reported achieving more of their work goals than those who used their flexible schedules to the fullest extent. It seems, therefore, that there might be too much of a good thing. Using flextime only occasionally when really needed, while keeping up regular working hours on most days, may be the golden strategy to reap the most benefits from flexible working time arrangements.
Ines Spieler is the Director of Studies at the Klinikum Nürnberg Medical School in Germany. Susanne Scheibe is an Associate Professor of Organizational Psychology at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. Christian Stamov Roßnagel is a Professor of Organisational Behaviour at Jacobs University Bremen (Germany). Arvid Kappas is a Professor of Psychology and Dean at Jacobs University Bremen (Germany).
The article was originally published on the LSE Business Review Blog
Featured Image Source: Pixabay
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