Despite the documented individual, job, and organizational antecedents of cyberloafing at the workplace, few studies have addressed whether, how and when group factors affect employees’ cyberloafing behaviors. Drawing on social learning theory and general deterrence theory, the purpose of this study is to test if observability of coworkers’ cyberloafing behavior affects employees’ perceptions of norms related to cyberloafing and subsequent cyberloafing behaviors and to test if sanctions can play a role in buffering these effects. An investigation of 335 employees working at Chinese enterprises establishes that observing others engaging in cyberloafing influences the employees’ perceived norms and cyberloafing behaviors and that employees’ p...
Cyberloafing, defined as the use of the Internet for personal use at the workplace, is emerging as a...
Employees spend approximately 2 h per day engaging in cyberloafing (i.e., using the internet at work...
Cyberloafing is the biggest time waster in organization, 69 percent of respondents admitted waste ti...
The purpose of this research is to identify the forces that impact the intention of employees to mis...
As the use of the Internet has grown, so have new ways for employees to loaf. Cyberloafing has becom...
Cyberloafing is a major productivity killer in the workplace. Drawing on social cognitive theory and...
Cyberloafing—the use of an electronic device at work for an activity that an immediate supervisor wo...
Employees spend approximately 2 h per day engaging in cyberloafing (i.e., using the internet at work...
Cyberloafing poses a serious threat to organizations. Seeking a comprehensive understanding of cyber...
Purpose – The purpose of the present study is to investigate antecedent factors that influences cybe...
Personal Internet use at work known as cyberloafing has received considerable amount of concern by r...
Counterproductive work behaviors have been studied extensively, but much less work has been done on ...
Purpose: Cyberloafing is the personal use of internet while at work. The purpose of this paper is to...
The use of the Internet at work for reasons unrelated to work, or cyberloafing, is a potentially har...
The Internet enables employees to be more productive than ever before, but it also allows employees ...
Cyberloafing, defined as the use of the Internet for personal use at the workplace, is emerging as a...
Employees spend approximately 2 h per day engaging in cyberloafing (i.e., using the internet at work...
Cyberloafing is the biggest time waster in organization, 69 percent of respondents admitted waste ti...
The purpose of this research is to identify the forces that impact the intention of employees to mis...
As the use of the Internet has grown, so have new ways for employees to loaf. Cyberloafing has becom...
Cyberloafing is a major productivity killer in the workplace. Drawing on social cognitive theory and...
Cyberloafing—the use of an electronic device at work for an activity that an immediate supervisor wo...
Employees spend approximately 2 h per day engaging in cyberloafing (i.e., using the internet at work...
Cyberloafing poses a serious threat to organizations. Seeking a comprehensive understanding of cyber...
Purpose – The purpose of the present study is to investigate antecedent factors that influences cybe...
Personal Internet use at work known as cyberloafing has received considerable amount of concern by r...
Counterproductive work behaviors have been studied extensively, but much less work has been done on ...
Purpose: Cyberloafing is the personal use of internet while at work. The purpose of this paper is to...
The use of the Internet at work for reasons unrelated to work, or cyberloafing, is a potentially har...
The Internet enables employees to be more productive than ever before, but it also allows employees ...
Cyberloafing, defined as the use of the Internet for personal use at the workplace, is emerging as a...
Employees spend approximately 2 h per day engaging in cyberloafing (i.e., using the internet at work...
Cyberloafing is the biggest time waster in organization, 69 percent of respondents admitted waste ti...