Co-workers working from home and individual and team performance

Publication date

2020-03-01

Authors

van der Lippe, TanjaISNI 0000000110074407
Lippényi, ZoltánISNI 0000000419438432

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

The number of firms supporting work from home has risen dramatically as advances in communication technology have fundamentally transformed the way humans cooperate. A growing literature addresses working from home, but focuses only on individual workers, overlooking potential influence of co-worker engagement. Our aim is to study the influence of co-workers working from home on individual and team performance. We use unique data from a large-scale survey involving nine European countries, 259 establishments, 869 teams and 11,011 employees to show that the impact of working from home by co-workers on performance is considerable and has remained hidden in past studies because they did not account for co-worker effects. While working from home may be useful for some workers, it does bring issues for them as well. Specifically, we demonstrate that co-workers working from home negatively impact employee performance. Moreover, team performance is worse when more co-workers are working from home.

Keywords

co-workers, employees, multilevel, organisations, performance, working from home, Human Factors and Ergonomics, Strategy and Management, Management of Technology and Innovation

Citation

van der Lippe, T & Lippényi, Z 2020, 'Co-workers working from home and individual and team performance', New Technology, Work and Employment, vol. 35, no. 1, pp. 60-79. https://doi.org/10.1111/ntwe.12153