IT Road Warriors: Balancing Work--Family Conflict, Job Autonomy, and Work Overload to Mitigate Turnover Intentions

This study examines the antecedents of turnover intention among information technology road warriors. Road warriors are IT professionals who spend most of their workweek away from home at a client site. Building on Moore's (2000) work on turnover intention, this article develops and tests a model that is context-specific to the road warrior situation. The model highlights the effects of work family conflict and job autonomy, factors especially applicable to the road warrior's circumstances. Data were gathered from a company in the computer and software services industry. This study provides empirical evidence for the effects of work family conflict, perceived work overload, fairness of rewards, and job autonomy on organizational commitment and work exhaustion for road warriors. The results suggest that work family conflict is a key source of stress among IT road warriors because they have to juggle family and job duties as they work at distant client sites during the week. These findings suggest that the context of the IT worker matters to turnover intention, and that models that are adaptive to the work context will more effectively predict and explain turnover intention.

[1]  Terry S. Overton,et al.  Estimating Nonresponse Bias in Mail Surveys , 1977 .

[2]  C. Fornell,et al.  Evaluating structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error. , 1981 .

[3]  Tor Guimaraes,et al.  Exploring Differences in Employee Turnover Intentions and Its Determinants Among Telecommuters and Non-Telecommuters , 1999, J. Manag. Inf. Syst..

[4]  Lillian T. Eby,et al.  Motivational bases of affective organizational commitment: A partial test of an integrative theoretical model , 1999 .

[5]  Soon Ang,et al.  The missing context of information technology personnel: a review and future directions for research , 2000 .

[6]  D. Ones,et al.  Occupational Stress : Toward a More Integrated Framework . , 2022 .

[7]  Jack J. Baroudi The impact of role variables on IS personnel work attitudes and intentions , 1985 .

[8]  Lynda A. King,et al.  Relationships of job and family involvement, family social support, and work-family conflict with job and life satisfaction , 1996 .

[9]  W. Schaufeli,et al.  Consistency of the burnout construct across occupations , 1996 .

[10]  Pamela J. Hinds,et al.  Communication across Boundaries: Work, Structure, and Use of Communication Technologies in a Large Organization , 1995 .

[11]  L. Porter,et al.  Alternative Approaches to the Employee-Organization Relationship: Does Investment in Employees Pay Off? , 1997 .

[12]  Joe M. Ricks,et al.  The Dimensionality of the Maslach Burnout Inventory across Small Business Owners and Educators. , 2000 .

[13]  M. L. Cooper,et al.  Antecedents and outcomes of work-family conflict: testing a model of the work-family interface. , 1992, The Journal of applied psychology.

[14]  Janet W. Salaff,et al.  Where Home is the Office: The New form of Flexible Work , 2008 .

[15]  Karen S. Markel,et al.  Developing and Testing an Integrative Model of the Work–Family Interface , 1997 .

[16]  Robert McMurrian,et al.  Development and validation of work–family conflict and family–work conflict scales. , 1996 .

[17]  Terence R. Mitchell,et al.  An Alternative Approach: The Unfolding Model of Voluntary Employee Turnover , 1994 .

[18]  Boris W. Becker,et al.  Workload and psychological strain: A test of the French, Rodgers, and Cobb hypothesis , 1992 .

[19]  Lyman W. Porter,et al.  Employee-Organization Linakges: The Psychology of Commitment, Absenteeism and Turnover , 1985 .

[20]  Willem Verbeke,et al.  Do Organizational Practices Matter in Role Stress Processes? A Study of Direct and Moderating Effects for Marketing-Oriented Boundary Spanners , 1996 .

[21]  Jeffrey H. Greenhaus,et al.  The intersection of work and family roles: Individual, interpersonal, and organizational issues. , 1988 .

[22]  P. Hom Employee Turnover , 1994 .

[23]  Jo Ellen Moore,et al.  One Road to Turnover: An Examination of Work Exhaustion in Technology Professionals , 2000, MIS Q..

[24]  Nicholas J. Beutell,et al.  Work and Family Variables, Entrepreneurial Career Success, and Psychological Well-Being , 1996 .

[25]  Blake E. Ashforth,et al.  A meta-analytic examination of the correlates of the three dimensions of job burnout. , 1996, The Journal of applied psychology.

[26]  Kathryn M. Bartol,et al.  Turnover among DP personnel: a casual analysis , 1983, CACM.

[27]  H. J. Arnold,et al.  A multivariate analysis of the determinants of job turnover. , 1982 .

[28]  France Bélanger,et al.  Workers' propensity to telecommute: An empirical study , 1999, Inf. Manag..

[29]  Gary Klein,et al.  A Discrepancy Model of Information System Personnel Turnover , 2002, J. Manag. Inf. Syst..

[30]  D. Ganster,et al.  Impact of family-supportive work variables on work-family conflict and strain: A control perspective. , 1995 .

[31]  Jerry R. Goolsby,et al.  Behavioral and Psychological Consequences of Boundary Spanning Burnout for Customer Service Representatives , 1994 .

[32]  Jason Bennett Thatcher,et al.  Information Technology Worker Turnover: An Integrative Model and Empirical Test , 2001, International Conference on Interaction Sciences.

[33]  Zinta S. Byrne,et al.  The relationship of emotional exhaustion to work attitudes, job performance, and organizational citizenship behaviors. , 2003, The Journal of applied psychology.

[34]  John L. Cotton,et al.  Employee Turnover: A Meta-Analysis and Review with Implications for Research , 1986 .

[35]  K. Widaman Hierarchically Nested Covariance Structure Models for Multitrait-Multimethod Data , 1985 .

[36]  Wynne W. Chin The partial least squares approach for structural equation modeling. , 1998 .

[37]  Michael P. Leiter,et al.  The impact of interpersonal environment on burnout and organizational commitment , 1988 .

[38]  Rebecca Nesbit On the fly , 2008 .

[39]  P. Bentler,et al.  Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis : Conventional criteria versus new alternatives , 1999 .

[40]  Lotte Bailyn,et al.  Toward the perfect workplace? The experience of home-based systems developers , 1988 .

[41]  David F. Gillespie,et al.  The relationship between burnout and organizational commitment in two samples of health professionals , 1998 .

[42]  Jason Bennett Thatcher,et al.  Turnover of Information Technology Workers: Examining Empirically the Influence of Attitudes, Job Characteristics, and External Markets , 2002, J. Manag. Inf. Syst..

[43]  Jill R. Kickul,et al.  Supervisory Emotional Support and Burnout: An Explanation of Reverse Buffering Effects , 2001 .

[44]  A. Leung,et al.  Role Stressors, Interrole Conflict, and Well-Being: The Moderating Influence of Spousal Support and Coping Behaviors among Employed Parents in Hong Kong , 1999 .

[45]  Christina Maslach,et al.  Burnout: The Cost of Caring , 1982 .

[46]  C. Speier,et al.  The Hidden Minefields in the Adoption of Sales Force Automation Technologies , 2002 .

[47]  Jeffrey H. Greenhaus,et al.  Sources of Conflict Between Work and Family Roles , 1985 .

[48]  J KacmarCharles,et al.  It road warriors , 2007 .

[49]  E. Hill,et al.  Influences of The Virtual Office on Aspects of Work and Work/Life Balance , 1998 .

[50]  Magid Igbaria,et al.  Determinants of MIS employees' turnover intentions: a structural equation model , 1992, CACM.

[51]  G. R. Oldham,et al.  Relationships between Office Characteristics and Employee Reactions: A Study of the Physical Environment. , 1983 .

[52]  Constance R Sullivan-Blum,et al.  Balancing Acts , 2004, Journal of homosexuality.

[53]  Magid Igbaria,et al.  Career Orientations of MIS Employees: An Empirical Analysis , 1991, MIS Q..

[54]  Joseph A. Cote,et al.  Lack of method variance in self-reported affect and perceptions at work: Reality or artifact? , 1989 .

[55]  Jason Bennett Thatcher,et al.  Moving Beyond Intentions and Toward the Theory of Trying: Effects of Work Environment and Gender on Post-Adoption Information Technology Use , 2005, MIS Q..

[56]  B. Mannheim,et al.  Family structure, job characteristics, rewards and strains as related to work‐role centrality of employed and self‐employed professional women with children , 1984 .

[57]  Richard G. Netemeyer,et al.  A cross-national model of job-related outcomes of work role and family role variables: A retail sales context , 2004 .

[58]  Hubert S. Feild,et al.  Has the Inverted-U Theory of Stress and Job Performance Had a Fair Test? , 2003 .

[59]  J. Hackman,et al.  Development of the Job Diagnostic Survey , 1975 .

[60]  Meghna Virick,et al.  Managing the boundary spanner--Customer turnover connection. , 1997 .

[61]  S. Jackson,et al.  Burnout in organizational settings. , 1984 .

[62]  Jia Lin Xie,et al.  Job Scope and Stress: Can Job Scope Be Too High? , 1995 .

[63]  James C. Anderson,et al.  STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING IN PRACTICE: A REVIEW AND RECOMMENDED TWO-STEP APPROACH , 1988 .

[64]  W. Mobley,et al.  Review and Conceptual Analysis of the Employee Turnover Process , 1979 .

[65]  Deborah E. Rupp,et al.  Three roads to organizational justice , 2001 .

[66]  Jonathan L. Johnson,et al.  On the Use of "Intent to..." Variables in Organizational Research: An Empirical and Cautionary Assessment , 1999 .

[67]  T. Beehr Perceived situational moderators of the relationship between subjective role ambiguity and role strain. , 1976, The Journal of applied psychology.