Print Email Facebook Twitter Impact of workplace change on satisfaction and productivity Title Impact of workplace change on satisfaction and productivity: A comparative analysis of case studies in Thailand and the Netherlands Author Riratanaphong, C. van der Voordt, D.J.M. Faculty Architecture Department Real Estate and Housing Date 2011-05-24 Abstract This paper presents the findings from a case study in Thailand on the use and experience of a new working environment, five months after the organisation moved to a new office building. The purpose of this study is to collect new data about employee satisfaction and perceived productivity after a workplace change, to find out which aspects employees find most important in their work environment, and to explore the impact of national and organisational culture. The data-collection included interviews, observations, analysis of documents, and the use of questionnaires in order to measuring employee satisfaction, perceived support of labour productivity through the work environment, perceived dominant characteristics of the work environment, and key dimensions of national and organisational culture. Results from the Work Environment Diagnosis Instrument (WODI) are compared with similar data from case studies in the Netherlands. As such, this study made it possible to explore the impact of workplace change in different cultural contexts. The research findings reveal many differences in employee satisfaction and prioritized aspects. On most aspects of the work environment the percentages of satisfied employees in the Thailand case are much lower than the corresponding average percentages in the Dutch cases. The Thai employees put much more emphasis on adjacency and locality of spaces, subdivision of the whole building, and sharing own ideas about the work environment, whereas functionality and comfort of workspaces and opportunities for concentration and communication are mentioned much less by the Thai people than by the Dutch people. The preference for a less hierarchical organisation and the quite masculine culture of Thai people may have their impact here. A limitation of the study is the lack of data about organisational culture in the Dutch cases. Additional data collection in Dutch working environments and more in-depth analyses are needed for a further exploration and explanation of different responses in connection to different people, places, processes and culture. The originality and value of the paper is the exploration of similarities and dissimilarities in the impact of new working environments on employee satisfaction, perceived productivity support and prioritized aspects in two different cultures: Asia and Europe. Subject workplace changeemployee satisfactionproductivityprioritiesculture To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:57079302-41d4-4d6c-80c4-b8314c21bca0 Publisher EuroFM ISBN 978-94-90694-05-0 Source EFMC2011: Proceedings of the 10th EuroFM research symposium: Cracking the productivity nut, Vienna, Austria, 24-25 May, 2011 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type conference paper Rights (c) 2011 The Author(s) Files PDF 273966.pdf 340.71 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:57079302-41d4-4d6c-80c4-b8314c21bca0/datastream/OBJ/view