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Article

Implementing Remote Working Policy in Corporate Offices in Thailand: Strategic Facility Management Perspective

Department of Construction Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
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Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2021, 13(3), 1284; https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031284
Submission received: 24 December 2020 / Revised: 21 January 2021 / Accepted: 22 January 2021 / Published: 26 January 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Future of Facilities Management and Sustainable Development)

Abstract

:
There was a sudden shift in the way people work during the COVID-19 pandemic. To keep business continuity, many organizations have implemented a remote working policy for employees to work from home. Strategic facility management (FM) acted to support remote working policies by developing organizational norms in an organization. Meanwhile, the human resource (HR) department chose to achieve business performance while remote working by gaining job motivation among employees. However, there is limited understanding of how well organizations adapted to the remote working policy, and what are the critical factors affecting their remote work performance. The present study aimed to explore the effect of organizational norms on remote working, on remote work productivity, and organizational commitment among Thai employees. The study conducted an online questionnaire survey to a total of 414 Thai employees from various corporate offices. Hierarchical component modeling was applied and achieved a good model fit on the measurement and structural models. Results indicated that organizational norm has a significant effect on perceived productivity and organizational commitment, while sustaining work demand. Moreover, employees’ job motivation can sustain employees’ commitment to the organization in a remote working context. These findings proposed the strategic FM guide, through which a remote working policy can further enhance FM practice.

1. Introduction

Remote working is an innovative working model, developed since information and communication technologies (ICT) have enabled its organization. Remote working, also often referred to as telework, telecommuting, virtual work, and remote working arrangement [1,2], is defined as the shift in work style from direct management to distance management [3,4,5]. Remote working is not a new topic in strategic-level facility management (FM). Many organizations adopt this policy to extend the flexibility in their business towards employee performance. The reasons for implementing remote working in businesses are described in three perspectives: to respond to urban industrialization, to transform the manner of working under the rise of digitalization, and to provide flexibility to workers [5]. These objectives comprise the original design of the physical working environment, organizational norms, and supporting facilities. Facility managers must focus carefully to balance the overall transformation process to their society [6]. Though the remote working policy has been refined through strategic FM in various industries [7], there is a lack of understanding of how remote working strategies influence employees’ performance capacity and psychological state [8]. The remote working strategy involved many computer-based technological operation systems and software through workplace transformation, such as communication channels, virtual conferences, and operational automation and analytics for each department [9]. Significantly, the speed of digitalization across the business due to COVID-19 related-change was accelerated even faster than workplace transformation in the normal situation [10]. The finding found that managing remote working applications among organizational leaders is critical but insufficient [9].
Furthermore, not every employee can achieve the flexibility from the remote work options provided by their organization. In some organizations, remote working remains similar to performing non-traditional office-based work [8]. Some employees may not be familiar with remote working tools for individual and group tasks [5]. The use of such tools requires specialized training to standardize outcomes, to be on par with on-site job outcomes [11].
The remote working initiative has become a well-known strategy since establishing the co-working space business model in Thailand in 2012 [12]. Practitioners and academic researchers in Thailand have spoken about remote working as a workplace strategy [13,14]. The growing popularity of co-working spaces amongst the young generation, freelancers, and small and medium-sized enterprises presented a low hierarchical environment and showed high collaborative efficiency among workers. Moreover, many international organizations in Thailand have included remote working policies in their business operation [15]. This shift harnesses an organization’s optimal value, which benefits organizational brand identity, marketing communication, and work community [16].
However, the sudden change to remote work became a big challenge among organizations in Thailand when the COVID-19 pandemic was declared in March 2020 [17]. Working amidst the pandemic required physical distancing to prevent disease transmission. All organizations, in every impacted sector, were forced to embrace remote working protocol to prevent workplace density. Employees were kept safe by launching a ‘work from home (WFH)’ policy. In such conditions, organizations considered reducing unnecessary expenses, such as office rent and building maintenance costs [18]. PwC stated that 20% of Thai companies practiced working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some companies asked their staff to undertake WFH at least two days per week and go to the office only if necessary, such as conferences or workshops [19]. This period of pandemic became a massive experiment of the remote work operation. Employees who have never worked remotely under normal circumstances were required to do so during this crisis [8]. Inexperienced employees have become an unexpected primary consideration before implementing remote working. Additionally, many sectors faced widespread rises and declines in work demand [20]. These dramatic changes significantly influenced individuals’ attitudes in work continuity, job performance, and perceived productivity [21,22,23]. In this unstable and uncertain situation, considerable resources and work caused difficulties in management. Entire teams and leaders needed to perform multiple disciplines and make decisions quickly to collaborate with suppliers and customers—all to keep the business running [24]. Employees must face an inconvenient psychological strain, which reduces job motivation to the workplace and organizational commitment [25,26]. As such, the organizations are challenged with the management of work demand while sustaining employees’ productivity and commitment [27,28].
With the challenges faced by organizations, FM that mainly focused on physical asset management falls short on the consideration of human resource (HR) concerns. HR functions, such as training and service, become the required solution to maintain employees’ work processes and gain the most efficiency from organizational human assets during pre- and post-workplace transformation [29,30]. The focus on remote work adoption in the existing FM framework has been derived by organizational context and environmental context. HR practices at organizational and group level become the following stage of remote working implementation. The individual outcomes are only explored after achieving remote work practice [31]. Based on the previous issues, the main gap of facility management approach on workplace transformation is not noticing HR drivers at the beginning of remote working implementation. Employees’ negative outcomes from remote work implementation may increase and affect organizational cost [4].
Therefore, the present study aimed to explore the mediating effect of organizational norms on remote working and job motivation on the relationship between work demand and employees’ perceived productivity and commitment. The study’s finding would increase awareness among top management to consider the organizational norm of remote working and job motivation as a workplace strategy to stabilize the quality of work demands, perceived productivity, and employee’s organizational commitment. In contrast, without considering human resource and physical asset management for remote working transformation, organizations may experience an unexpectedly negative outcome from overall employee performance.

1.1. Literature Review

Implementing remote working in an organization is monitored from various procedures, and overall work outcome and job satisfaction after the implementation are measured through Human Resource Management (HRM) or self-evaluation [32]. However, the measurement of remote working efficiency receives little attention in FM practices [33]. Tucker and Pitt [34] remarked that satisfaction measurement on FM literature and practices is limited, even if understanding users’ perceptions could add value to an organization and its service delivery. Some psychological outcomes from remote work initiatives on employees could affect business continuity and bring about remote working study concerns. Strategic FM managers could inspire new measurement factors for a remote working policy, influence the right working environment, and efficiently sustain organizational assets. The main variables will be detailed in this section.

1.1.1. Perceived Productivity

Employees’ remote work productivity can be influenced by leadership and organizational support [35]. Sullivan and Khazanchi explained that effective remote work productivity required high and constructive communication to sustain the working relationship among the organization’s members [36,37]. However, previous studies showed that the communication between colleagues via virtual connection was often less than the communication among colleagues who work on-site [38,39,40]. Without a precedent, and leadership initiative, employees may have difficulty initiating work-related conversations. Besides, remote working involves IT and the operation of devices such as personal computers, laptops, or smartphones, while employees are required to engage in collaborative activities when remote working. The organizations need to provide management support via those facilities [41]. Nevertheless, remote working showed an impact on employees’ concentration, affecting work productivity [38]. The lack of control of the remote working environment, such as poor internet connection [42], distractions from the physical workplace environment, and interruptions from non-work-related calls and email [43], can affect employees’ concentration work.

1.1.2. Organizational Commitment

Implementing a remote working policy can affect employees’ commitment to the organization [40,44]. Organizational commitment in remote work studies is defined as a psychological state the justifies an employee’s relationship with the organization, where it has implications for the decision to retain membership in the organization [45,46]. Allen and Meyer [47] explained three main components of organizational commitment: (1) affective commitment that is demonstrated by individuals’ emotional attachment to an organization; (2) continuance commitment that represents an employee’s need to remain in an organization owing to perceived costs to leave; and (3) normative commitment that presents a set of cultural factors that keep the employees in an organization [31,48]. Previous multicultural studies showed that the significance of employees’ attention to their workplace, especially workplace arrangement policy based on building trust between managers and employees [49,50], had been extensively covered [46]. Nonetheless, exciting issues emerged in examining employees’ commitment in different cultures; findings demonstrated different responses from each organizational commitment component. Veldhoven explained that affective commitment and continuance commitment could predict participative leadership and organizational effectiveness [28]. Machokoto examined employees’ commitment during the COVID-19 outbreak and found that continuance commitment displayed a significant role in the emotional cost during the challenging circumstance [51]. The remote working context also challenges organizational commitment. Without controlling for pace and amount of work, employees could exhibit lower performance and reduced organizational commitment and incorporate perspective to their organizations [40].

1.1.3. Work Demand

Work demand refers to the workload and job stress given to the employees [43]. Many academic reviews described work demand as one of the significant factors in the ‘Job Demands–Resources Model’ proposed by Bakker which performed the concept of psychological and physical capacity of work to achieve work goals [28,52,53]. The shift of work demand in an organization frequently occurs by demographic change and, consequently, impacts workplace transformation to sustain their optimal business continuity [54]. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the organization faced massive disruptions in the workforce, global supply chain, and demand for services, which caused the increase in work demand and the requirement of the next level in architecting remote work technology [9]. With the increasing work demand, employees may feel slightly challenged and motivated to perform [28]. However, the sudden change in work demand can also cause the employees to experience emotional exhaustion and losing work–life balance. Consequently, work demand may wear-out employees’ mental attention from attaining their work assignments [55]. Gadeyne spotted that work demand showed an opposite effect on employees’ productivity in a remote working context. Employees showed reduced productivity when working remotely with an increasing work demand, due to the difficulty of compensating for ICT-use during personal and working hours [43]. In addition, Grant also suggested that work demand acts as an external stressor to the employees when the supervisors or organization issued work assignments and expectations for completion, affecting the organizational commitment of remote working employees [40]. On the contrary, with deep concern about creating efficient work demand, an organization can cultivate a sustainable organizational system [56] and maintain resiliency [57]. During a crisis, the organization could build employees’ confidence by remaining stable on work demand with potential communication. In addition, organizations with a high response on work demand also have the potential to save lives and keep efficient employee’s recruiting and retention [24]. Therefore, this study hypothesized the following.
Hypothesis 1A.
Work demand positively affects perceived productivity.
Hypothesis 1B.
Work demand positively affects organizational commitment.

1.1.4. Organizational Norms on Remote Working as a Mediator

Organizational norms refer to the shared values and behaviours among an organization’s members to attain a common goal [45,58]. Today, remote working arrangement flexibility has become a primary consideration for any future-transformed organization, and such flexibility is particularly relevant in the new norm emerging from the demographic change in the last few decades [50,59]. Therefore, organizational norms on remote working (hereafter referred to as ‘organizational norms’) have provided a solution to organization transformation from the traditional organizational culture and encouraged employees to approach tasks with productivity and flexibility [59]. According to Deloitte, the concept of today’s organizational norms can be explained with three core elements: (1) working remotely, particularly from home; (2) balancing between the team, customers, and home; and (3) leveraging technological facilitation to enable continuous collaboration and communication. These elements encouraged the work capacity of employees to empower business continuity and sustainability of workplace transformation. According to the FM approach, organizational norms highlighted not only the service support from FM teams but also the strategic alignment among the employees in an organization [7]. Ninaus explained that employees who work remotely showed reduced perceived productivity due to the poor remote working application in their organization [25]. Organizational norms that showed insufficient remote working support would raise negative consequences to organizational operation by increasing job stress and reducing organizational commitment [60].
On the other hand, Szczepańska and Woszczyna revealed that organizational norms that provide positive remote working support improved employees’ organizational commitment [61]. During COVID-19, organizational norms respond to implementing new culture and context to remain operational and ensure work demand and continuity [59]. Therefore, this study hypothesized the following.
Hypothesis 1C.
Organizational norms on remote working mediate the relationship between work demand and perceived productivity.
Hypothesis 1D.
Organizational norms on remote working mediate the relationship between work demand and organizational commitment.

1.1.5. Job Motivation as a Mediator

The definition of job motivation is theorized from the Job Characteristic Model by Hackman and Oldham [62]. It refers to employees’ self-generated motivation from the internal experience when they feel fully responsible for work outcome on a meaningful task and finds out how well they perform. During accelerated organizational transformation, employees can experience psychological and physical impacts and these influence their job motivation. Firstly, the economic instability and technological disruption that lead to a change in work demand created fear among employees [63]. Baert, S., et al. conducted research and found that employees’ risk from job loss during the crisis, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, increased by 49.9%, and their fear of an impact on their personal job motivation rose by 27.5% [64]. Secondly, the physical change of working facility, forming the new organizational norms on remote working, challenged employees’ performance amidst distractions in their new work environment, which may consequently reduce their job motivation [65]. The International Labor Organization suggested organizations should sustain their employees’ motivation and well-being by providing support through HR and FM teams to ensure the level of productivity and the functioning of services [8]. Understanding the requirement of remote working from HR, including knowledge, regulatory, and the legislative environment, is essential for delivering technical and process-related services from FM to motivate employees at the organization [7]. Job motivation plays an important mediator role in the relationship between work characteristics and job performance [66]. Past research has found the significant effect of job motivation on employees’ job satisfaction, employees’ retention, organizational engagement, and outcome [67]. Therefore, the present study examined job motivation as the mediator variable in the relationship proposed from the previous hypotheses:
Hypothesis 2A.
Job motivation mediates the relationship between work demand (WD) and perceived productivity.
Hypothesis 2B.
Job motivation mediates the relationship between work demand (WD) and organizational commitment.
Hypothesis 2C.
Job motivation mediates the relationship between organizational norms on remote working and perceived productivity.
Hypothesis 2D.
Job motivation mediates the relationship between organizational norms on remote working and organizational commitment.
In summary, the present study aimed to explore the impact of work demand on employees’ perceived productivity and organizational commitment, mediated by organizational norms and job motivation. Figure 1 illustrates the relations between work demand, organizational norms, job motivation, perceived productivity, and organizational commitment.

2. Materials and Methods

This study was conducted in corporate organizations in Bangkok, Thailand. The questionnaire was first developed and validated through an interview with nine experts in FM and Thailand’s property management services. The questionnaire was revised according to experts’ feedback and then distributed to participants using an online survey. A total of 414 valid responses from various sectors were received. The hierarchical component analysis was applied first to assess the measurement model and eliminate the insignificant measurement items. After validation of the measurement model, the structural model of causality relationships between factors was examined. The findings are discussed in the discussion section.

2.1. Questionnaire Development

Before examining the mediating effect of the organizational norm on remote working and job motivation on the relationship between work demand, perceived productivity, and organizational commitment, the measurement tool for evaluating remote working implementation should be developed. Deloitte [59] suggested that organizations and leaders must implement new organizational norms for remote working to remain operational and ensure continuity. Sirikrai [68] proposed the Kilmann–Saxton Culture-Gap survey’s measurement tools to measure perceived organizational support in role management and functional management, including task support, task innovation, social relation, and personal freedom. Wojcak et al. [69] also proposed that a leader’s role, including social influence, voluntary action, and followers’ behavior, could internalize the organizational norm system and change employee behavior. Combining all the other assessment tools, most of these tools have focused on the norm-based organizational measurement to address the significant implication of the sudden shift to remote work.
To assess job motivation’s mediating effect in an organizational context, the Motivating Potential Score (MPS) index could be a unique HR tool to predict job potential to motivate employees [70]. The MPS index uses a score-based summary from the job diagnostic survey established by Hackman and Oldham, which is widely used in human resources and organizational development [71]. The index computes task-related score variable, that is, the average of job variety (JV), task identity (TI), and task significance (TS) multiplied by autonomy (A) and feedback (F).
MPS = ([JV + TI + TS])/3) × A × F
The MPS index is divided into three levels: (1) low-motivating job (score below than 40%), (2) moderate-motivating job (score of 40–70%), and (3) high-motivating job (score more than 70%). The proposed Cronbach’s alpha for reliability evaluation is 0.79.
Veldhovan et al. [28] developed ‘The Questionnaire on the Experience and Evaluation of Work’(QEEW 2.0), which interpreted from a ‘Job Demands-Resources Model’ perspective [52] to measure work demand, including pace and amount of work, emotional workload, mental workload, physical effort, and role conflict. This evaluating subject could assess and measure the challenge at work and development opportunity in a specific working context. While these evaluation tools offer useful work demand measures, they are not considered the management practices that may affect individual work demand during remote working. The International Labor Organization (ILO) [8] stated clearly that employees and leaders might confront the increase in work demands when their entire teams worked remotely and suggested that management practices must be addressed to the remote work environment prioritization, workload, policy arrangement, and performance management.
To measure perceived productivity in remote working implementation, Mckinsey and Company suggested assessing two main focuses, namely, communication skills and collaborative productivity [24]. Van der Voordt [14] proposed the positive and negative effects of workplace innovation on communication quality. Sveiby and Simons [72] developed the Collaborative Climate Survey to measure the ability to work collaboratively with participants. Meanwhile, See [21] and Silva-C [11] also suggested that productivity concentration can be affected by different work environments and the increase in additional workload during remote work. Combining all these assessment tools, these consider the measuring perceived productivity, especially in the remote working context-related environment.
Mee Choo and Michielsens [45,46] suggested measuring organizational commitment to evaluate employees’ psychological state during remote work with the organization. To measure organizational commitment, Allen and Meyer [48] developed the measurement of organizational commitment into the three dimensions of psychological commitment, namely, affective commitment, continuance commitment, and normative commitment. The three organizational commitment states have been adopted widely in organizational and human resource practice in different regions and the office context [46].
Based on these measurement tools and previous studies, the authors drafted a questionnaire into a total of 88 items, including 17 items on demography groups, 9 items on the organizational norm (perceived organizational support and leadership support), 21 items on perceived productivity (collaborative productivity, communication skill, and productivity concentration), 11 items on the work demand, 15 items on organizational commitment (affective commitment, continuance commitment, and normative commitment), and 15 items on job motivation (the motivation potential score index). Participants were requested to evaluate their level of agreement on a Likert scale ranging from 1 for ‘strongly disagree’ or ‘the least’ to 7 for ‘strongly agree’ or ‘the highest.’

2.2. Interview with Experts

Experts were interviewed to ensure the questionnaires’ rationality and relevance to the current remote working policy in Thailand organizations. Table 1 shows the background of the nine experts in FM and property management. They were directors, presidents, workplace strategists, and top executives from companies A, B, and C, respectively, with work experiences ranging from 5 to 20 years. The experts from company A were the consultants specializing in remote working strategy. All companies had implemented remote working into facility management. Therefore, they were able to provide valid and reliable information and feedback regarding remote working. The experts advised adding essential items and eliminating irrelevant items from the questionnaire. After the interview, the questionnaires were finalized into a total of 58 items, including 11 items on the work demand, 9 items on organizational norms, 12 items on perceived productivity, 11 items on organizational commitment, and 15 items on job motivation based on the MPS index. An 11-item demographic questionnaire was also prepared.

2.3. Questionnaire Survey

An online survey was distributed to 1000 Thai employees of international and local organizations located in the city center of Bangkok, which has been designated as a lockdown zone (meaning that there were more than 100 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in the area). The respondents must possess at least one year of experience in a corporate office in any industry field. A total of 414 responses were valid, indicating a 41.4% effective response rate. Table 2 shows that, amongst respondents, 41.5% were male, and 58.5% were female; furthermore, 80% of them were between the ages of 26 to 40. Respondents were from various sectors, including agriculture and food (5.3%), consumer products (4.8%), finance (10.4%), industrial (7.0%), property and construction (22.7%), energy resources (2.9%), services (19.8%), technology (8.0%), education (14.5%), and government (4.6%). The majority (72.2%) were non-management employees, 12.1 and 15.7% were in middle and top management positions, respectively. Only 7.2% reported that remote working arrangement was stipulated in their job contract before the COVID-19 pandemic. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic, 40.6% of respondents reported working full-time from home, 31.4% of them reported working at the office only when necessary, and 22.2% of them were required to work at the office at least three times a week or all week with physical distancing practices. In terms of living conditions, 53.1% of respondents reported living with family without children, 20.3% were living with children, 19.3% were living alone, and 7.2% lived with friends or others. Finally, 57% of them earned a monthly income higher than 40,000 baht.

3. Results

This study applied partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) for hierarchical component analysis. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) test was first conducted to identify the control variables included in the model analysis. To assess the measurement model, exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was used to identify factors and items of each factor with adequate loadings. Overall, 12 items were dropped because of unsatisfactory factor loading (<0.5). Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) confirmed the adequate convergent validity and discriminant validity of the reflective measurement model. Finally, the structural model was examined. The good model fit was confirmed by Heterotrait–monotrait (HTMT) ratio. Common method bias was identified by full collinearity test. The proposed model, and the significant relationships in the model are discussed further. Statistic Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) statistics 23 and SmartPLS 3 software were used for data analysis.

3.1. Control Variables

An ANOVA test was conducted to identify respondents’ characteristics that may affect the constructs. Table 3 shows that respondents in different age groups had significant differences in the level of communication skill, normative commitment, and continuance commitment.
Respondents in different job levels significantly varied in their communication skills, affective commitment, normative commitment, and continuance commitment. Older employees with high job positions are concerned with their individual ability to influence others’ behaviour [73]. This concern brings about the imperative to take care of employees who relate to organizational commitment influence, through which employees increase their emotional bond to the organization [31].
By contrast, respondents with different income levels significantly varied in their work demand, organizational norms, productivity concentration, collaborative productivity, normative commitment, and job motivation. Income level presented the ability to work potential and the number of job-related outcomes [74].
Respondents with different living conditions showed significant differences in their communication skills, affective commitment, and job motivation. Moreover, respondents with the existing remote working policy in the organization exhibited significantly different organizational norms and job motivation compared with those without. This is because the standard living arrangement [75] of employees who preferred remote working implementation could present different impacts on employees’ performance [44] and skills development [76].
After the outbreak of COVID-19, respondents who were provided with remote working arrangements by their companies showed significant differences in work demand, organizational norms, productivity concentration, collaborative productivity, communication skill, and affective commitment. Therefore, the results have proven that remote working arrangements could affect employees’ work both positively and negatively on work performance [44,77]. The productivity outcome from remote working implementation could be the significant measurement for working context study, as it showed the essential result on remote working [25,41].

3.2. Measurement Model Assessment

This study applied a two-stage approach for hierarchical component analysis proposed by Ringle et al. (2012) [78]. Before examining the structural relationship between factors, the measurement model was assessed to ensure reliable and valid items gauging their constructs. EFA was first conducted to identify the reflective constructs and items used in the surveys. Principle Component Analysis (PCA) and Promax rotation with an eigenvalue greater than one was applied for the extraction of factors [79,80]. The factor analysis showed distinct and reliable factors when the Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin value was 0.873 and p < 0.001, which was above the recommended value of 0.60 [81]. Each item’s factor loading should be greater than 0.50, with no major cross-loadings [82]. As a result, work demand (WD) items; WD1, WD5–7, WD10–11, organizational norms (ON) items; ON1–2, affective commitment (AC) items; AC1–2, AC5, and continuance-normative commitment (CC) item; CC2 were dropped (factor loading < 0.5). The pattern matrix identified seven reflective constructs, with continuance commitment and normative commitment clustered into one construct. The combined effects of commitment constructs are aligned with the past literature recommended that combining constructs can measure work behavior and outcome [83,84]. Consequently, items of both constructs were combined and referred to as continuance-normative commitment. Overall, seven reflective constructs with clustered loading items were above the value of 0.5, and no major cross-loading was found between work demand, organizational norms, productivity concentration, collaborative productivity, communication skill, affective commitment, and continuance-normative commitment.
CFA was performed to validate the measurement model of reflective constructs by assessing the convergent validity and discriminant validity. The factor loadings, composite reliability (CR), and average variance extracted (AVE) values were analyzed to verify convergent validity. Following the recommendation by Hair et al. (2010), all items showed factor loadings greater than 0.5, except for WD8–9 and CC1, which were consequently eliminated from the model. Nunnally and Bernstein (1994) recommended a CR value above 0.7 to be a more stringent criterion of internal consistency reliability than Cronbach’s alpha [85]. Fornell and Larcker proposed that the threshold value for AVE should be greater than 0.5 [86]. Table 4 shows that the AVE and CR of each construct satisfied the criteria; hence, the convergent validity is adequate.
The discriminant validity was assessed by using the heterotrait–monotrait (HTMT) ratio approach. Table 4 shows the correlation matrix for the constructs with the diagonal elements replaced by the square roots of AVE. The square roots of AVE had a higher value than the correlations between these constructs and other constructs, thereby indicating good discriminant validity, as suggested by Hair et al. [87]. Henseler et al. [88,89] proposed a HTMT threshold value below than 0.900 for structural models with cognitive satisfaction. Thus, the constructs in the reflective measurement model were considered adequate. Appendix A presents the validated set of questionnaires.
To identify the common method bias in this studied model, a full collinearity test was performed. Following the recommendation by Kock [90], the Variance Inflation Factors (VIFs) values of latent variables should be lower than or equal to the threshold of 3.3. Table 5 shows that all latent variables satisfied the criteria; therefore, it is concluded that common method bias was not detected.

3.3. Structural Model Assessment

After validating the measurement models, the latent variable score of the lower-order constructs (LOCs) were obtained as indicators in the higher-order constructs’ (HOC) measurement in the structural model. Bootstrapping of 5000 samples was conducted to analyze the significance of the path coefficients between constructs. The results confirmed that the three LOCs to their HOC perceived productivity at a t value above 1.96. Communication skill exhibited the highest weight (0.621), followed by productivity concentration (0.515). Collaboration productivity showed an extremely low weight (0.002), and affective commitment and continuance-normative commitment were attributed significantly to their HOC organizational commitment at t value above 1.96. Continuance-normative commitment yielded a higher weight (0.750) than affective commitment (0.431).
Following the approach by Hair et al. [91], the coefficient of determination (R2), effect size (f2), and predictive relevance (q2) of the structural model were examined. R2 explains the predictive power of the model. As recommended by Henseler et al. [92] and Hair et al. [93], the endogenous constructs exhibited an R2 value of 0.75, 0.50, and 0.25, which are interpreted as substantial, moderate, and weak constructs, respectively. In Figure 2, the R2 values of organizational norms (R2 = 0.064), organizational commitment (R2 = 0.090), and job motivation (R2 = 0.046) were considered weak values and perceived productivity (R2 = 0.359) was considered a moderate value. These constructs have shown acceptable predictive power in the model.
The effect sizes of these significant constructs in the model (f2) were assessed to determine the degree of impact that an exogenous latent construct has on the endogenous latent construct [91]. When the exogenous construct was excluded from the path model, the change in the R2 value was observed, and the effect sizes of the exogenous latent constructs were estimated and compared [91]. Cohen [94] suggested a guideline measure for the effect size of f2, in which 0.35 indicates a large effect, 0.15 indicates a medium effect, and 0.02 indicates a small effect. Thereafter, a blindfolding procedure was applied to examine the model’s predictive relevance, with an omission distance set to 7 to assess the cross-validated redundancy measures for each endogenous construct [95]. Henseler et al. and Hair et al. stated that the values of 0.35, 0.15, and 0.02 would indicate a large, medium, and small predictive relevance for the endogenous construct [82,91,92,95].
Table 6 shows that work demand exhibited a strong effect size and predictive relevance on perceived productivity (f2 = 0.437, q2 = 0.428) greater than that on organizational norms (f2 = 0.068, q2 = 0.066) and job motivation (f2 = 0.048, q2 = 0.044). JM showed a weak effect size and predictive relevance on organizational commitment (f2 = 0.031, q2 = 0.029). Similarly, organizational norms had a weak effect size and predictive relevance on organizational commitment (f2 = 0.057, q2 = 0.052) and perceived productivity (f2 = 0.075, q2 = 0.025).
R2 (organizational norms = 0.064; perceived productivity = 0.359; organizational commitment = 0.090; job motivation = 0.046).
Effect size impact indicator are according to Cohen [94], f2 values: 0.35 (strong), 0.15 (moderate), and 0.02 (weak).
Q2 (organizational norms = 0.062; perceived productivity = 0.353; organizational commitment = 0.084; job motivation = 0.042).
Predictive relevance of predictor exogenous latent variables according to Henseler et al. [88,92], q2 values: 0.35 (strong), 0.15 (moderate), and 0.02 (weak).
The relationships between the constructs of work demand, organizational norms on remote working, motivating potential, perceived productivity, and organizational commitment was examined. The results yielded several significant relationships, as illustrated in Figure 2.
Results revealed that work demand had a positively significant direct effect on perceived productivity (β = 0.547, t = 14.665, p < 0.001); therefore, hypothesis 1A was supported. Hypothesis 1B was not supported because work demand showed no significant effect on organizational commitment (p > 0.05). However, organizational norms revealed a significant mediating effect between work demand (β = 0.254, t = 5.290, p < 0.001) and perceived productivity (β = 0.142, t = 3.252, p < 0.001) and organizational commitment (β = 0.230, t = 5.064, p < 0.001). Hypothesis 1C and hypothesis 1D were supported.
Job motivation exhibited a significant mediating effect between work demand (β = 0.214, t = 4.449, p < 0.001) and organizational commitment (β = 0.169, t = 3.232, p < 0.001), but not on perceived productivity (p > 0.05). Therefore, hypothesis 2A was not supported, whereas hypothesis 2B was supported. Organizational norms did not have a significant effect on job motivation (p > 0.05), whereas job motivation only showed a significant effect on organizational commitment (β = 0.169, t = 3.232, p < 0.001). Consequently, hypothesis 2C and hypothesis 2D were not supported.
A test of indirect effect was conducted. The results indicated that work demand had a strong direct effect on perceived productivity (β = 0.547, t = 14.665, p < 0.001), which was greater than the indirect effect through organizational norms (β = 0.036, t = 2.721, p < 0.01). Moreover, work demand showed a slightly greater effect on organizational commitment through organizational norms (β = 0.059, t = 3.515, p < 0.001) than job motivation (β = 0.036, t = 2.700, p < 0.01).
The structural model presented a standardized root mean square residual (SRMR) value of 0.032 and a normed fit index (NFI) value of 0.971, indicating a good model fit with the recommended SRMR of less than 0.08 [88,96] and NFI greater than 0.9 [97]. The model fit analysis confirmed the significance of the reflective constructs and the relationship in the proposed model.

4. Discussion

4.1. Employees’ Perceived Productivity and Organizational Commitment

This study proposed a mechanism model of perceived productivity and organizational commitment in a remote working context. The findings showed that perceived productivity could be significantly measured by three main constructs. Collaborative productivity performed the highest significance affecting employee’s perceived productivity (β = 0.621), followed by productivity concentration (β = 0.515) and communication skill showed a comparatively very low level of effect (β = 0.002). Previous studies focused on communication skills in physical organizational contexts, such as open space, cellular office, and co-working space, to calibrate spatial influence on communication capacity [98,99]. On the other hand, the studies on remote working may explore ICTs or teleworking support for remote working communication to explain employees’ communicational performance [2,100]. Therefore, productivity in the remote working context is less dependent on personal communication skills but better response through the work environment, activity, and tools that facilitate the communication process.
The model found organizational commitment attributed to affective commitment and continuance-normative commitment. Gellatly suggested the combination of commitment constructs could promote employees’ organizational commitment and deliver more complex levels of work outcome [101]. However, the result was found contradictory to Gellatly’s finding that explained the combination of affective commitment and normative commitment performed the highest influence among other combinations in the relation of work outcome and the turnover retention [101]. Instead, the present model proposed that, with the remote working implementation, a combination of continuance commitment and normative commitment performed the highest influence on employees’ organizational commitment (β = 0.750) than that of affective commitment (β = 0.431) alone. Employees working remotely get limited physical interaction with co-workers. As a result, affective commitment became less critical in the remote working environment. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic, employees experienced more fear of losing their job for income to support their family’s needs if they leave the organization, therefore cause a high level of continuance commitment to remain in the organization [51]. In addition, employees reported less work conflict in the remote working environment, drove a higher normative commitment willing to adapt to the difficulties and execute their obligation to the organization [102]. Somers [83] revealed that employees with high continuance-normative commitment performed the lowest absenteeism level compared to the other commitment constructs combination. This finding suggests that organizations prioritise continuance-normative commitment in remote working contexts to allow work flexibility for better work productivity and operation continuity, even during crisis.

4.2. Organizational Norms and Job Motivation as Mediators

The finding explained that organizational norms drive employees’ perceived productivity. Organizational norms showed a positive mediating effect on the relationship between work demand and employees’ perceived productivity. In comparison with the indirect effect of the mediator, work demand showed a significantly stronger direct effect on perceived productivity. The previous studies showed that a stable increment of work demand positively manipulated different employees’ job performance and consequently influenced organization performance [8,103]. Kazekami [77] suggested that employees could perform better in their jobs to sustain business continuity with good control of work pace in a remote working operation. However, In the pandemic situation during this study, it can bring emotional challenges amongst organizations and their employees. HR operations have to make efforts to increase the level of commitment and motivation of their employees after introducing several changes in the organization. In such a condition, assigning employees with a certain extend of work demand can positively affect employees’ organizational commitment. However, the finding found that work demand only significantly influenced organizational commitment through the mediating effect of organizational norms. This implicated the need to provide a remote working arrangement in the organization to ensure employees’ organizational commitment while coping with the work demand. Eventually, introducing a remote working policy with good control of work demand would improve employees’ organizational commitment and productivity. Guterresa and Armanu (2019) found that job motivation mediated the impact of leadership style, which is one of the core elements of organizational norms [61], on employee performance [104].
Job motivation revealed a significant mediating effect on the relationship between work demand and organizational commitment. Employees with high job motivation showed higher job performance [70]. With an increase in work demand, employees with the equivalent capability can perform the required work and feel motivated by the achieved outcome in return, consequently resulting in higher commitment. By contrast, organizational norms did not have a significant effect on job motivation. This finding is supported by Kamara et al. [105] that adaptive organizational norm derives from the external change, such as the physical environment and leadership, while motivation only derives from the internal incentives self-satisfaction and needs. Therefore, the organization ought to focus on providing skill training, knowledge sharing, and resource supporting that promote employees’ internal incentives for better job motivation [106,107].
In conclusion, organizational norms are shown as a higher significant mediator as compared with job motivation. In past research, HR has emphasized the role of job motivation in organizational performance [104,107]. However, this study’s finding showed that, from the FM perspective, organizational norms on remote working demonstrated higher efficiency in driving employees’ productivity and organizational commitment. As such, the facility manager necessitates understanding the workplace transformation mechanism to deliver the organizational norms on remote working, which bring significant value to promote employees’ productivity and organizational commitment.

4.3. Implications

4.3.1. Theoretical Implication

Firstly, this study developed a model to address the knowledge gap in understanding the mechanism of perceived productivity and organizational commitment in a remote working context. The finding discovered the significant mediating role of organizational norms on remote working. This significance offers a new measurement consideration and advances the body of knowledge on remote working in strategic FM. Secondly, the present study contributes to the valid measurement tool and model to assess remote working capability. Concerning organizational norms on remote working, the study provides a benchmarking reference for guiding organizations to better remote working performance. Thirdly, even though this study was done during the COVID-19 pandemic period, the model and measurement are also applicable to promote remote working transformational conditions.

4.3.2. Practical Implication

FM managers and organizations need to align the organizational strategy, operation, and norm into a uniform system FM manager should prioritize to promote remote working implication by FM practices. Firstly, the control of work pace, amount of work, and work continuity, which caused high quality in work demand, must be arranged in an organization to improve perceived productivity. FM may address the value-added perceived productivity on remote working towards work demand to top corporate management [108]. This could be more holistic and more accepted in implementing strategy in an organization. Additionally, the availability of flexible work demand is more in requirement during a crisis. FM must consider the ability to manage work demand importantly to retain employee’s productivity [46]. Secondly, to maintain or increase the organizational commitment of remote work employees, the organization must build efficient organizational norms, namely remote work supervision, leadership support, and system functionary, to support the remote work environment [58,61,109]. For example, FM managers can consider remote working as a strategy to reflect employee retention in an organization. Lastly, in the past research on remote working and COVID-19, job motivation was usually focused by HR development on evaluating the impact of motivation on employee’s commitment during remote work and crisis [11,64,106]. However, the result of this present study suggested that organizational norms presented as of higher importance. This could confirm that remote working performs well on organizational flexibility and balances individual skills in collaboration and concentration to accept a remote working application. Therefore, FM should reconsider using the HR factor as job motivation to identify the level of organizational commitment during remote work and crisis. HR should also consider using organizational norms in their employee’s evaluation when organizations recognise remote working in their work context.

4.4. Limitations and Future Research

The present study aimed to explore organizational norms on remote working in corporate organizations. Unfortunately, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, access to physical asset management was limited during the officially adjusted remote work policy. Therefore, this study only focused on the impact of organizational norms from the employees’ perspective. Future studies on physical asset management for remote working through simulation can further assist FM managers’ decision-making to effectively implement remote work and enhance the sustainability of remote work transformation and the readiness of workplace shift when remote working is required. Besides, to leverage the measurement model of strategic FM, FM must require a collaboration with HR data to collectively identify and monitor performances of both physical and human factors in a remote working context. Such data present the FM policy’s reliable performance, instead of measuring only physical performance or individuals’ performance. Pre- and post-measurement on employees’ feedback from policy impact or tracking remote work activities from technological and physical usage could be measured in the strategic FM research. This aspect could help stakeholders or corporate real estate make effective decisions on remote working. Additionally, remote working is not a new phenomenon. This norm’s next direction offers an alternative future investment for stakeholders’ consideration of business flexibility by reducing physical costs and allocating more technological development funds. Future research may require a substantial approach on FM or space management-related applications to simultaneously simulate work performance through physical office space and employees’ activities. The present study was undertaken in Thailand, and the finding may be limited to cultural differences. Future study in other regions is strongly encouraged.
Lastly, this study also focuses on developing a model to address the gap in understanding the mechanism of perceived productivity and organizational commitment in a remote working context. The study acknowledges authors to explore the effect of the different dimensions on perceived productivity and organizational commitment in various workplace topology or during workplace transformation in the future study. The study’s statistical method has a limitation on assessing PLS path model’s predictive power [87] and the control for unobserved heterogeneity issues [110]. Hence, these techniques could be extended as a routine procedure for model predictive research in the future.

5. Conclusions

The impact of technological disruption and global economic change requires FM managers to adapt their organizational facility to respond to the consequences of workplace transformation. Many organizations responded to those impacts by launching remote working procedures. However, there is a limited understanding of what is the critical factors affecting their work performance. According to the FM previous approach, HR factors have not been noticed in workplace transformation in evaluating employee performance during remote work. Some organizations only remained on their existing organizational norms and continued on-site operation without remote work transformation, resulted in employees’ signs of dissatisfaction [64] and reduced work performance [111]. This study aimed to explore the mediating effect of organizational norms on remote working and job motivation in the relationship between work demand on employees’ productivity and organizational commitment in the remote working context. The finding discovered the significant mediating role of organizational norms on remote working which can contributes to the valid measurement model to assess remote working capacity. This study suggested that FM could develop efficient organizational norms on remote working to leverage organizational commitment and perceived productivity, even in during the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, the job motivation as the HR factor still plays an important mediating role in affecting organization commitment when organization sustain work demand. To conclude, strategic FM approach cannot reach the most successful outcome without the inclusion of HR measures, as well as the support on remote working vision and implementation from other stakeholders. FM managers need to understand the physical and human factors in remote working context comprehensively for efficient strategy. Such understanding can close the gap between FM planning and workplace transformation caused by the rapid action needed on remote working.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, W.T. and X.D.; methodology, W.T.; validation, W.T. and H.W.L.; formal analysis, H.W.L.; investigation, W.T.; data curation, W.T. and H.W.L.; writing—original draft preparation, W.T. and H.W.L.; writing—review and editing, W.T., H.W.L. and X.D.; visualization, W.T., H.W.L.; supervision, X.D.; project administration, W.T.; All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was supported by CoreNet Global Education Fund.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The data sets used and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Acknowledgments

Our sincerest appreciation to Thailand Facility Management Association (TFMA) for supporting us many sources of information and professionals’ contact. We are also thankful for the FM insight of Ayuthaporn (Ek) Buranakul and the encouragement from friends and family.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Questionnaires.
Table A1. Questionnaires.
CodeQuestions
Work demand (WD)
Please rate your level of agreement on the statement below from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree)
WD2Recently, my daily work in the organization and team operation has continued.
WD3Recently, my daily work in the organization and team operation has been flexible.
WD4Recently, my daily workload has been carried out as usual.
Organizational norms of remote working (ON)
Please rate your level of agreement on the statement below from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree)
ON3My organization has carefully involved remote work arrangement in the organization.
ON4My organization has conducted technical training on remote work support.
ON5My organization has encouraged employees to work remotely when necessary.
ON6My organization has focused on alternative flexible work arrangements and emerging support technologies.
ON7My leader influences the organizational dynamics of remote work.
ON8My leader supports employees who face challenges in remote work.
ON9My leader facilitates the alignment between employees and organizational goals on remote work arrangement.
Organizational commitment (OC)
Please rate your level of agreement on the statement below from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree)
Affective commitment (AC)
AC3I feel I am part of this organization.
AC4I feel emotionally attached to this organization.
Continuance-Normative commitment (CC-NC)
CC3I feel that my organization needs me as much as I need them.
NC1I do not think it is right to leave even if it were to my advantage.
NC2This organization deserves my loyalty.
NC3I feel obligated to my organization and would not leave my organization now.
Perceived productivity (PP)
Please rate your level of performance on the statement below from 1 (the least) to 7 (the highest)
Productivity concentration (PC)
PC1My productivity concentration during remote work
PC2My task management and delivery performance during remote work
PC3My work–life balance during remote work
PC4My overall satisfaction with my productivity during remote work
Collaborative productivity (CP)
CP1My discussion and brainstorming skills with the team during remote work
CP2My collaborative skills in formal meetings during remote work
CP3My project presentation skills during remote work
CP4My overall satisfaction with the collaborative activities during remote work
Communication skill (CS)
CS1My ability to deliver information through online channels during remote work
CS2My ability to manage workflow during remote work
CS3My ability to manage my work schedule during remote work
CS4My overall satisfaction with the communication in remote work
Motivating potential score
Please rate your level of agreement on the statement below from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree)
Skill Variety
SV1My job requires me to perform a variety of tasks that involve different skill sets.
SV2My job requires me to use a number of complex or high-level skills.
SV3My job is simple and repetitive. (Reverse question)
Task Identity
TK1My job involves doing a whole piece of work from beginning to the end.
TK2My job provides me with the chance to finish the pieces of work I begin.
TK3My job is arranged in a way that I do not get involved in an entire piece of work from beginning to end. (Reverse question)
Task significance
TS1The outcome of my job can significantly affect the lives and well-being of other people.
TS2A lot of people can be affected by how well my job gets done.
TS3My job is simple and repetitive. (Reverse question)
Autonomy
AU1My job gives me almost complete responsibility for decisions on how and when the work is done.
AU2My job gives me considerable opportunity for independence and freedom in how I do the work.
AU3My job denies me any chance to use my personal initiative or judgment in carrying out the work. (Reverse question)
Feedback
FB1My job is set up such that I receive almost constant ‘feedback’ as I work about how well I am doing.
FB2Simply doing the work required by my job provides many chances for me to figure out how well I am doing.
FB3The job itself provides very few clues about whether I am performing well. (Reverse question)

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Figure 1. Hypothesized model in the present study.
Figure 1. Hypothesized model in the present study.
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Figure 2. Structural model, path coefficient and t-value in parentheses, significant t value at >1.96, * p < 0.001.
Figure 2. Structural model, path coefficient and t-value in parentheses, significant t value at >1.96, * p < 0.001.
Sustainability 13 01284 g002
Table 1. Details of experts who were interviewed.
Table 1. Details of experts who were interviewed.
No.CompanySectorDepartmentPositionExperience
1AProperty management and facility management service providerTop managementDirector, head of workplace strategist17 years
2AProperty management and facility management service providerWorkplace strategy and design Senior workplace strategist6 years
3AProperty management and facility management service providerWorkplace strategy and designWorkplace strategist5 years
4BFacility managementTop managementPresident5 years
5BFacility managementTop managementExecutive committee5 years
6CProperty development and architectural designTop managementExecutive vice president20 years
7CProperty development and architectural designTop managementVice president17 years
8CProperty development and architectural designResearch and developmentSenior developer9 years
9CProperty development and architectural designResearch and developmentSenior developer7 years
Table 2. Demographic information of survey respondents.
Table 2. Demographic information of survey respondents.
CharacteristicsRespondents (n = 414)
Gender
Male41.5% (172)
Female58.5% (242)
Age
18–25 years old6.0% (25)
26–40 years old80.0% (331)
41–55 years old12.8% (53)
>55 years old1.2% (5)
Occupational sectors
Agriculture and food5.3% (22)
Consumer products4.8% (20)
Finance10.4% (43)
Industrial7.0% (29)
Property and construction22.7% (94)
Energy resources2.9% (12)
Services19.8% (82)
Technology8.0% (33)
Education14.5% (60)
Government4.6% (19)
Job position
Employee (non-management)72.2% (299)
Middle management12.1% (50)
Top management15.7% (65)
Income (in baht)
10,000–20,000/month11.1% (46)
20,001–40,000/month31.9% (132)
>40,000/month57.0% (236)
Current living condition
Living alone19.3% (80)
Living with friends or others7.2% (30)
Living with family without children53.1% (220)
Living with family with children20.3% (84)
Remote working arrangement in job contract
Yes7.2% (30)
No73.9% (306)
Unknown18.8% (78)
Working arrangement during COVID-19 period
Working full-time from home40.6% (168)
Working full-time from home and working at the office when necessary31.4% (130)
Working at the office at least three times per week and practices physical distancing at the office14% (58)
Working full-time at the office while observing physical distancing8.2% (34)
Others5.8% (24)
Table 3. ANOVA test.
Table 3. ANOVA test.
Constructs AgeJobIncomeCurrent Living ConditionRemote Working Policy in the OrganizationRemote Working During COVID-19
Work demand0.6451.9403.834 *1.1491.5414.022 **
Organizational norms 0.6010.9063.107 *0.23912.641 ***8.063 ***
Productivity concentration0.5632.0784.235 *1.0220.4355.694 ***
Collaborative productivity1.1881.8933.908 *0.4920.2546.331 ***
Communication skill3.086 *4.18 *2.4782.823 *0.6568.202 ***
Affective commitment0.8244.616 **1.7894.135 **1.8643.056 *
Normative Commitment1.804 *3.282 ***2.015 **0.8231.5341.451
Continuance Commitment5.587 ***9.627 ***1.3782.4190.7510.645
Job Motivation0.1192.4078.299 ***2.663 *5.580 **0.878
* p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.
Table 4. AVE, CR and discriminant validity of the reflective constructs.
Table 4. AVE, CR and discriminant validity of the reflective constructs.
ConstructsAVECR1234567
1. Affective Commitment0.6640.798-
2. Collaborative Productivity0.7470.9220.088-
3. Communication Skill0.8220.9480.110.702-
4. Continuance-Normative Commitment0.5560.8290.460.0720.075-
5. Organizational Norms0.6460.9270.1360.2690.2690.299-
6. Productivity Concentration0.620.8650.1020.5890.850.1010.257-
7. Work Demand0.540.7770.0960.5790.6520.1690.2960.584-
Note: CR, composite reliability; AVE, average variance extracted. The square root of AVE in parentheses, p < 0.01. HTMT, heterotrait–monotrait ratio threshold value < 0.900.
Table 5. Full Collinearity VIFs.
Table 5. Full Collinearity VIFs.
Constructs12345
1. Job Motivation-1.0621.0911.0811.078
2. Organizational Commitment1.073-1.051.1021.099
3. Organizational Norm1.1581.103-1.1261.146
4. Perceived productivity1.4951.5081.467-1.12
5. Work demand1.4811.4951.4831.113-
Note: The Variance Inflation Factors (VIFs) ≤ 3.3.
Table 6. Assessment of path coefficient, effect size, and predictive relevance.
Table 6. Assessment of path coefficient, effect size, and predictive relevance.
RelationshipsβStd. Errort Valuef2q25%95%
Work demand -> Organizational norms0.2540.0485.2900.0680.0660.1770.339
Work demand -> Perceived productivity0.5470.03714.6650.4370.4280.4820.607
Work demand -> Job motivation0.2140.0484.4490.0480.0440.1370.285
Job motivation -> Organizational commitment0.1690.0523.2320.0310.0290.0850.252
Organizational norms -> Organizational commitment0.2300.0465.0640.0570.0520.1510.303
Organizational norms -> Perceived productivity0.1420.0443.2520.0750.0250.0660.214
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Tanpipat, W.; Lim, H.W.; Deng, X. Implementing Remote Working Policy in Corporate Offices in Thailand: Strategic Facility Management Perspective. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1284. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031284

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Tanpipat W, Lim HW, Deng X. Implementing Remote Working Policy in Corporate Offices in Thailand: Strategic Facility Management Perspective. Sustainability. 2021; 13(3):1284. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031284

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Tanpipat, Waynika, Huey Wen Lim, and Xiaomei Deng. 2021. "Implementing Remote Working Policy in Corporate Offices in Thailand: Strategic Facility Management Perspective" Sustainability 13, no. 3: 1284. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031284

APA Style

Tanpipat, W., Lim, H. W., & Deng, X. (2021). Implementing Remote Working Policy in Corporate Offices in Thailand: Strategic Facility Management Perspective. Sustainability, 13(3), 1284. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031284

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