Why Do Extreme Work Hours Persist? Temporal Uncoupling as a New Way of Seeing
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research
Standard
In: Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 62, No. 6, 01.12.2019, p. 1818-1847.
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - Why Do Extreme Work Hours Persist?
T2 - Temporal Uncoupling as a New Way of Seeing
AU - Blagoev, Blagoy
AU - Schreyögg, Georg
PY - 2019/12/1
Y1 - 2019/12/1
N2 - This paper develops temporal uncoupling as a new way of seeing the puzzling persistence of extreme work hours, as well as the temporal relations of organizations and their environments. Drawing on a historical case study, we trace and analyze the genesis, reinforcement, and maintenance of extreme work hours in an elite consulting firm over a period of 40 years. We find that a small shift in temporal structuring mobilized two positive feedback processes. These processes consolidated a temporal order that increasingly uncoupled from the traditional workweek. Grounded in these findings, we make two contributions. First, we challenge the orthodox view of entrainment as an ideal synchronous relation between organizations and their environments. Instead, we offer temporal uncoupling as an alternative lens. It enables us to see how both synchrony and asynchrony are potentially viable options, which coexist and sometimes coconstitute each other. Second, we shed new light on temporality as a constitutive force that underpins extremework hours and offer a novel explanation of their persistence as a case of systemic temporal lock-in. We develop positive feedback as a mechanism that explains how small temporal shifts can become consolidated into hardly reversible temporal lock-ins.
AB - This paper develops temporal uncoupling as a new way of seeing the puzzling persistence of extreme work hours, as well as the temporal relations of organizations and their environments. Drawing on a historical case study, we trace and analyze the genesis, reinforcement, and maintenance of extreme work hours in an elite consulting firm over a period of 40 years. We find that a small shift in temporal structuring mobilized two positive feedback processes. These processes consolidated a temporal order that increasingly uncoupled from the traditional workweek. Grounded in these findings, we make two contributions. First, we challenge the orthodox view of entrainment as an ideal synchronous relation between organizations and their environments. Instead, we offer temporal uncoupling as an alternative lens. It enables us to see how both synchrony and asynchrony are potentially viable options, which coexist and sometimes coconstitute each other. Second, we shed new light on temporality as a constitutive force that underpins extremework hours and offer a novel explanation of their persistence as a case of systemic temporal lock-in. We develop positive feedback as a mechanism that explains how small temporal shifts can become consolidated into hardly reversible temporal lock-ins.
KW - Management studies
KW - overwork
KW - professional service firms
KW - tempirality
KW - time
KW - entrainment
KW - Social systems theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85077232491&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5465/amj.2017.1481
DO - 10.5465/amj.2017.1481
M3 - Scientific review articles
VL - 62
SP - 1818
EP - 1847
JO - Academy of Management Journal
JF - Academy of Management Journal
SN - 0001-4273
IS - 6
ER -