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How does restructuring of public information influence the psychosocial working environment? Pernille Hohnen, Ph.D. (social Anthropology) Senior Researcher.

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Presentation on theme: "How does restructuring of public information influence the psychosocial working environment? Pernille Hohnen, Ph.D. (social Anthropology) Senior Researcher."— Presentation transcript:

1 How does restructuring of public information influence the psychosocial working environment? Pernille Hohnen, Ph.D. (social Anthropology) Senior Researcher

2 Introduction and presentation of WORKS About WORKS = The Work Organisation Restructuring in the Knowledge Society The impact of the re-organisation of work on work and employment Quantitiative studies and Qualitative case studies in 14 countries Impact on Health and safety and the Psychosocial working environment

3 Public administration – customer service Qualitative case studies Customer service (and IT) Examples: Housing,Transport (driver and vehicle licensing Agency), IT services, General information Semi-skilled front office employees (and back stage IT experts with higher education)

4 Restructuring of the value chain in public administration Value chain practically means information chain, i.e. from designing, formatting information to citizens, making it affordable and usable, organising feed back or dialogue, integrating information flows from front office to back office and vice versa (Devos & Valenduc, 2007: 6).

5 Characteristics of restructuring: public administration customer service Customer orientation – customer oriented bureaucracy Accessibility as a key driver (one-stop principle) –Walk inn offices –allround call centres, –one entrance web pages

6 Forms of restructuring information services Technological development Forms of restructuring: Private outsourcing Public/private partnerships Public internal externalisation/mergers

7 Impact on working conditions Difference between front office and back office More problematic outcomes for front office workers Call centre work (private)

8 Conceptualizing impact on psychosocial working environment Demands in work Influence upon work Social Support Recognition and Reward Predictability Meaning Kristensen (1999 & 2000)

9 Tabel 1. Psychosocial working environment for low- skilled front office employees in (private) call centres DimensionNew problemsNew possibilities Demands in work Increased number of calls, time limits for each call. Increased work intensity Influence over work Standardised procedures governing all work activity Social Support Each employee work alone with limited breaks and limited contact to colleagues Recognitions and reward Low wages – lack of acknowledgement Predictability Precarious employment – atypical contracts MeaningStandardisation of contact with customers delimits involvement Increased contact with customers and solving customers problems

10 Private call centres (Italian case) The work of operators at the call centre is very stressful. Between one phone call and the next there are on an average five seconds…and this rhytm is kept up for eight straight hours. This same operation is repeated hundreds of times a day. The stress is mostly due to the monotony and repetitiveness and the intensity of work rhythm, to time saturation (i.e. the relationship between waiting time and pauses and the time to actually execute the task given) and to the degree of self-control that is demanded when dealing with the public.

11 Table 2. Psychosocial working environment for low- skilled front office employees in walk-in- centres/one-stop-shops DimensionNew problemsNew possibilities Demands in work Increased demands for ICT skills and documentation. Longer working hours. Increased variety of work tasks, Increased competency. Realistic performance targets Influence over work Increased standardisation in some cases High degree of autonomy Social Support Contact with customers and co- workers Recognitions and reward New career opportunities Higher or similar wages Predictability Standard employment contracts (high degree of job security) MeaningIncreased contact with customers and ability to solve customers problems

12 Example: Walk-inn and service centres …We can give them more information now which is something we couldnt do before. It was always oh Im sorry, youve got to go here, or youve got to go there. Wheras now you can actually answer 99,9% of the questions they have, because youve got the tools to do it. (UK joint venture)

13 Example: Organising calls in walk-inn and service centres Agents also felt that they have freedom with each individual call to follow it though because there is no real pressure to get rid of the customer and get on to the next one. Telephone work in this respect seems to be regarded as similar to face- to-face customer service, where it is common to have to comfort people who are upset. (UK joint venture)

14 Example: Management in Walk-inn and service centres I dont stress about it (achieving targets), I think that is something for the senior management. Yeah, I think its the levels above us who have to worry. We do what we can to answer calls when we have them. (UK joint venture)

15 Psychosocial risks areas Standardisation, formalisation and centralisation Increase in surveillance Intensification of work and performance Forced flexibility and longer working hours (customer orientation) Change in employment conditions (fixed contracts) High frequency of organisational change Unclear division of health and safety responsibilities

16 Management and organisation in focus Performance management: Realistic targets ICT development creates new options for control – management decides how to use them Increased demand for management responsibility and the establishment of role clarity Focus on customer service Managements support Emphasis on creating learning and career options


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