Impact of COVID-19 induced teleworking arrangements on employees in NGOs : implications for policy and practice for leadership
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Date
Authors
Sanhokwe, Hamfrey
Takawira, Simon
Kunene, Zanele
Maunganidze, Farai
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Sage
Abstract
The article sought to address real or perceived “teleworking hesitancy” by generating empirical evidence on employee
exposure to teleworking in a global south context. The results of the empirical investigation were integrated with the growing
body of research on the future of the post-pandemic workplace. The results depicted the opposite and significant effects of
perceived workload and organizational teleworking support on employee teleworking experience and the (growing) desire
to utilize flexible working options. Furthermore, the results showed the significant effects of nonwork demands (negative)
and resources (positive) on work engagement and the moderating role of external support contacts. The results further
affirmed the mediating role of work engagement on perceived productivity. Based on these results, incremental “A-E”
policy and practice considerations that place talent at the heart of organizational efforts to remain sustainably future-fit are
proposed. The proposed policies and practices carry a futuristic bias, a conscious recognition that the future workplace will
be “hybrid.” Areas for future research are presented.
Description
Keywords
Evolving workplaces, Moderated mediation analysis, Thematic content analysis, Policy and practice considerations
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Sanhokwe, H., Takawira, S., Kunene, Z., & Maunganidze, F. (2022). Impact of COVID-19 Induced Teleworking Arrangements on Employees in NGOs: Implications for Policy and Practice for Leadership. SAGE Open, 12(2). https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440221079908.
