The information technology
professional is regularly expected to work with colleagues in both
IT and other areas of the organization. During these interactions,
the IT employee is expected to conform to occupational or
organizational norms regarding the display of emotion. How do these
display norms affect the IT professional? This study examines an IT
professional’s emotional dissonance, the conflict between norms of
emotional display, and an employee’s felt emotion. Emotional
dissonance is studied as a factor of IT professionals’ work
exhaustion, job satisfaction, and turnover intention, modeled as an
extension to the work of Moore.* The
results indicate emotional dissonance predicts work exhaustion
better than do perceived workload, role conflict, or role ambiguity,
constructs which have long been associated with work exhaustion. Job
satisfaction is influenced directly by role ambiguity and work
exhaustion. In turn, job satisfaction influences employee turnover
intention. We discuss implications of these findings for both IT
management and future research.
*J. E. Moore,
"One Road to Turnover: An Examination of Work Exhaustion in
Technology Professionals," MIS Quarterly (24:1), 2000, pp.
141-168.
Keywords: IT
workforce, emotional dissonance, work exhaustion, turnover
intention, job satisfaction