Focus On: Nancy P. Rothbard

The Discontented Thirties

According to a new research study by the Sloan Center on Aging & Work at Boston College, the people who are most satisfied with their jobs are older employees – those age 50 and up. The most dissatisfied? Those between the ages of 30 and 39.

Furthermore,employees age 40 and older are the most engaged and show the highest level of organizational commitment,according to the study,while those under 30 are almost as satisfied as the most satisfied group of 50 and older.

The study based its conclusions on work experience data from 11,298 individuals working for seven multinational companies at 24 worksites in 11 countries. 

So why is the 30-39 group so dissatisfied?

“That is the stage of life where people typically start a family and have young kids at home,” says Wharton marketing professor Cassie Mogilner. “Therefore, these people are more likely to feel the strains of balancing work and life, thus pulling their minds away from being fully engaged” on the job. In addition, notes management professor Nancy Rothbard, this age group “is in an intense career stage where they are often engaged in continued on-the-job learning, with greater responsibilities.”

Peter Cappelli, director of Wharton’s Center for Human Resources, notes that “life satisfaction seems to hit bottom [right around] age 30,” and may be related to the fact that these employees’ “expectations are not being met.”

But as employees’ children get older,says Mogilner, “those who are career oriented can get their minds back in the game and enjoy greater satisfaction from their work. Jobs provide a great source of self-definition,particularly when people are young and starting out their careers — and identifying what careers they want to pursue — and then again when they have fulfilled the toughest years of parenting.

“Employees who are working later [in life] and who are most satisfied with their jobs may reflect a case of self-selection,” she adds. “Usually by one’s 50s,if [a person] is working,she has likely climbed up the ladder to be successful in her profession. This group is likely to continue to work if they like what they do.”

As for Wharton management professor Matthew Bidwell, he is “a bit surprised by the results. My impression was that generally workers got more satisfied as they got older, and that the main reason for this was that they were generally moving into more rewarding jobs with higher pay and more responsibility. So I would expect job satisfaction to be lower for those under 30. In fact, if you look at the study, there doesn’t appear to be a statistical difference between the under 30s and the 30-39 year olds. So the results are consistent with the standard finding of job satisfaction increasing over time.”

Does the survey’s finding – that those over 50 are the most satisfied,and those over 40 the most engaged and committed – go against conventional wisdom that older workers are not as valuable as younger ones? What can be inferred from the study’s conclusions depends on what measure of engagement the authors used, says Rothbard. “It sounds like they used commitment as a proxy for engagement. So I think this more reflects the fact that those over 40 are more satisfied and committed to the organization,which can lead to greater workforce stability as it is negatively related to whether people leave.”

Bidwell says he wouldn’t “draw too much of a straight line between the commitment and value to the firm. Workers can be highly committed but also bad at their jobs, and vice versa. I’m not sure on the conventional wisdom about age. There are concerns that older workers will be less flexible than younger ones,but along many other dimensions including maturity, stability,knowledge, etc., you would expect them to outperform younger workers.”

Does the stalled economy affect these results, by, for example, creating a need for older workers to stay in their jobs longer,even as companies cut back on pay and promotions? Or is the 30 to 39 cohort always pretty dissatisfied with their lot? “I don’t think this is related to the stalled economy per se,” says Cappelli. ”After all, it’s stalled for everyone.”

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Seeing Is Learning — Why Face Time Between Coworkers Is More Important Than You Think

Many companies assume that telecommuting saves money. But do employees miss out on anything when they’re not working side by side?

In today’s world of instant messages, smartphones and global conference calls, the concept of two colleagues working face-to-face feels almost quaint. But it may be more important than we realize, according to Wharton management professor Nancy Rothbard. “There’s a lot of information you can glean from being present,” she says. “There is some fascinating research coming out that shows that we learn from observing others.”

She points to recent brain research on “mirror neurons” as an indicator that people may unknowingly benefit from their co-workers’ physical presence. Mirror neurons were first identified by neuroscientist Giacomo Rizzolatti and colleagues at the University of Parma, Italy, who were doing research on monkeys and monitoring neurons that they thought were connected to performing certain motions. They found that when a monkey grabbed an object, certain neurons in the brain would fire. Then the researchers noticed something else: The same brain neuron would fire when the monkey simply watched somebody else grabbing an object. (Click here to watch a video about mirror neurons.)

“They found that what we do when we are watching [others] is that our neurons start mimicking, firing in the same way other people’s [neurons] are firing,” Rothbard notes. “They think this is the basis for social learning. We learn how to do things by watching other people…. It creates a pathway neurologically for us to follow.”

What, then, are the implications for telecommuters and companies that use them? It could mean that skills don’t get transferred as quickly or completely from one employee to another because colleagues are unable to watch each other work. Or it may make it difficult for people to connect emotionally with distant coworkers, since mirror neurons are also associated with empathy.

As the economy flirts with a double-dip recession and cost-conscious companies hesitate to re-hire, however, the workplace for many Americans has shifted away from crowded offices to a new world of solitary work. From freelancers to telecommuters to laid-off workers making do with temporary gigs, an increasing number of Americans are reporting to work each day from a corner of their home, a space in the garage, a private office or even a table at the local coffee shop.

For more on how to successfully navigate the challenges of working remotely, click here to read a related story from Knowledge@Wharton.

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