Purdue: Although it may seem counter-intuitive for
companies to support reducing workloads for professionals, new research
by Ellen Kossek of Purdue University's Krannert School of Management highlights the benefits to business and keys to making such work arrangements successful. Reduced-load work allows a professional to
shorten his or her hours, decrease workload and take a commensurate pay
cut while actively remaining on a career path, said Kossek, the Basil S.
Turner Professor of Management and research director of the Susan Bulkeley Butler Center for Leadership.
Reduced-load work is not the same as flextime or
telecommuting, Kossek said. She used the examples of a doctor who sees
75 patients a week rather than 100, a professor who teaches three
classes instead of four, or an IT professional working four days a week
instead of five.
The research, published in Human Resource Management,
found that companies use reduced-load work to retain talented and
productive employees by allowing them to continue working while having
more time for other important life activities, such as family, education
or community.
For the employee, reduced-load work provides the
ability to be engaged with these concerns while continuing to make
career progress. It also can prevent burnout, increase work energy and
foster cost-savings. Kossek said that more professionals also are taking
advantage of reduced-load to phase into retirement.
Kossek and her co-researchers interviewed line
managers, human resource experts and senior executives and found that
flexibility is key to successful reduced-load work.
"While the company must be flexible in allowing
reduced-load work and respect the employee's non-work time, the employee
must be flexible in being available when needed to meet client
demands," Kossek said.
A key question is how to customize the work to get the most value for both the customer and the business, she said.
The managers said employees best suited to
reduced-load work are good performers with jobs that either have
predictability or less exposure to tight deadlines or crises.
They also found managers working reduced-load,
including one CEO working 80 percent of a normal workload, although
reduced-load work is rarer at the executive level.
For the research, funded by the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation, Kossek worked with Ariane Ollier-Malaterre, professor in the
University of Quebec School of Management; Mary Dean Lee, professor in
the Desautels Faculty of Management at McGill University; Shaun Pichler,
associate professor in the Mihaylo College of Business and Economics,
California State University, Fullerton; and Douglas T. Hall, Morton H.
and Charlotte Friedman Professor of Management, Boston University School
of Management.