DocumentCode
1395574
Title
An Empirical Investigation of the Impact of Individual and Work Characteristics on Telecommuting Success
Author
Turetken, Ozgur ; Jain, Abhijit ; Quesenberry, Brandi ; Ngwenyama, Ojelanki
Author_Institution
Ted Rogers Sch. of Inf. Technol. Manage., Ryerson Univ., Toronto, ON, Canada
Volume
54
Issue
1
fYear
2011
fDate
3/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
56
Lastpage
67
Abstract
Individual and work characteristics are used in telecommuting plans; however, their impact on telecommuting success is not well known. We studied how employee tenure, work experience, communication skills, task interdependence, work output measurability, and task variety impact telecommuter productivity, performance, and satisfaction after taking into account the impact of communication technologies. Data collected from 89 North American telecommuters suggest that in addition to the richness of the media, work experience, communication skills, and task interdependence impact telecommuting success. These characteristics are practically identifiable and measurable; therefore, we expect our findings to help managers convert increasing telecommuting adoption rates to well-defined and measurable gains.
Keywords
home working; North American telecommuter; communication skill; employee tenure; task interdependence; task variety; telecommuter productivity; work characteristics; work experience; work output measurability; Communication media richness; individual characteristics; success factors; telecommuting; telework; work characteristics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Professional Communication, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0361-1434
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPC.2010.2041387
Filename
5398860
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