Wellbeing in line managers during mandatory working from home: How work and personal factors combine

M. van Gelder*, M. van Veldhoven, K. van de Voorde

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterScientificpeer-review

Abstract

The pandemic, particularly the aspect of forced working from home, has had a major impact on the workforce. Previous studies show that line managers have also experienced severe mental strain during this period. Since it is expected that hybrid working will be more the new normal than the exception in future, this study further examined line managers’ work-related wellbeing in terms of engagement and exhaustion. Following the job characteristics model (JCM), we explore the mediating role of meaningful work between workplace innovation before the pandemic and line managers’ work-related wellbeing during forced working from home. The underlying idea is that organizations that already adopted workplace innovation practices before the pandemic, give teams and employees more control, thus allowing a more meaningful role for line managers, which positively impacts line managers’ work-related wellbeing during the pandemic. In addition, building upon Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) Theory and the role of personal resources therein, we explore digital leadership skills and work–life segmentation preference as moderators between meaningful work and work-related wellbeing. Our findings show that workplace innovation is positively associated with engagement via its effect on meaningful work, but not associated with exhaustion. Second, we found that work–life segmentation preference amplifies the relation between meaningful work and engagement (positive link) as well as exhaustion (negative link). This indicates that line managers with a high work–life segmentation preference who have a low score on meaningful work, experience less engagement and more exhaustion than line managers with a high score on meaningful work when working from home. No support was found for the moderation of digital leadership skills in the relationship between meaningful work, engagement, and exhaustion. Based on these results, we discuss implications for research and we provide practice recommendations.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe psychological challenges of working from home
EditorsNaval Garg, Freda Van Der Walt, John Burgess
Place of PublicationLausanne
PublisherFrontiers Media SA
Chapter8
Pages1-12
Number of pages12
ISBN (Electronic)978-2-8325-2718-4
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • line manager
  • work related wellbeing
  • mandatory working from home
  • COVID-19
  • workplace innovation

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Wellbeing in line managers during mandatory working from home: How work and personal factors combine'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this