Working flexible hours can make you feel less motivated

Working flexible hours can make you feel less motivated

Flexible hours, a coveted perk in the modern workplace, may not always yield the expected benefits. Surprisingly, it could even dampen motivation. Let's delve into the paradoxical relationship between flexible work schedules and employee motivation.

A recent study by Kaitlin Woolley, associate professor of marketing at Cornell University’s Johnson Graduate School of Management, and Laura Giurge, a research associate of organizational behavior at London Business School, found that toiling outside of regular 9-to-5 hours “undermines people’s intrinsic motivation for their professional and academic pursuits.”

This spells trouble for companies considering that (a) people do their best work and are happier when they’re fueled by an inner drive

Protect time off to be with friends and family

Studies have shown that people are happiest when they can share time off with people they’re closest to

Social cues about when to work are hard to ignore

Longstanding conventions about when we should or shouldn’t be working are not easily cast aside.

How can we make non-standard work hours more tolerable?

Researchers surveyed participants to determine how people felt about working on the Monday of a long weekend versus a normal Monday, to see how motivated people felt working a holiday versus a regular day, and to figure out what was generally on people’s mind while working holidays.

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