An Exploration of the Personal Non-Work Factors Affecting Employee Engagement When Working from Home
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14738/assrj.99.13040Keywords:
Working from home, remote workers, employee engagement, purpose, well-being, work-life balanceAbstract
This paper reports on the research investigating the personal, non-work factors that influence the employee engagement of those working remotely from home. As corporations moved their workers to work from home because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the dynamics of work and the workplace evolved, with new, non-work-related human variables acquiring significance. Emerging research indicates that working from home is here to stay, making it necessary to understand and factor in those non-work elements in employee-related decision making. This exploratory qualitative study examines the crucial non-work elements influencing employee engagement based on the lived experiences of twenty-three employees who began working from home during the pandemic. Findings reveal that concerns about health, well-being, and work-life balance influence employee engagement when people work from home. The paper suggests that decision-makers look at the results of this study when answering important questions about the future of work and how things that do not have anything to do with work could affect how engaged employees are when they work from home.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Raghu Krishnamoorthy
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors wishing to include figures, tables, or text passages that have already been published elsewhere are required to obtain permission from the copyright owner(s) for both the print and online format and to include evidence that such permission has been granted when submitting their papers. Any material received without such evidence will be assumed to originate from the authors.