New Management Approaches in Digitized Work as the Cure for Inequality?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Bureaucracy and Gender: Software Development as a Story of Bureaucracy and Androcentricity?
2.2. Self-Efficacy and Gender
3. Analytical Approach
4. Methodology
5. Empirical Findings
“[…] because the focus is always on people and cooperation between people and that, I think, is making such a jolt right now and will continue […]”(SM1, 01:03:37)
“Hence it is important for the people, how I interact with them. So, humanity is becoming increasingly important.”(FGM7, 00:22:09)
“But feel-good management is not measurable, one is in the background […]. It’s not measurable and that’s the biggest problem, how to sell it to a classic manager, they can’t measure it and say, ah you helped plan a summer event yes great someone else could have done it. So, you have an incredibly poor basis for argumentation.”(FGM3, 00:26:03)
“[…] so for complex topics, experts working on it, yes and will also … agile methods are in my opinion there also inevitable.”(SM1, 00:34:10)
5.1. Gender Composition and Labor
“Basically, it is perhaps more this helper syndrome that is triggered a bit. I assume that the ladies are a bit more affected by this, without me finding any scientific data […] possibly also a higher need for security among women.”(FGM2, 00:25:59)
“I think that maybe women are more attracted to the subject, because they perhaps, how shall I say, still have this caring gene, perhaps more in it than the men.”(FGM7, 00:40:47)
“[...] because often it [FGM] is put in the direction of, um Hotel Mama, caretaker on duty, such an extended office assistance and therefore also often addressed to women again, i.e. those who are the assistant to the managing director and then the managing director, for example, says ‘oh you already take care of everything anyway, then we’ll do it like this now, then you’ll also be the feel-good manager’. But that ... that’s not it. So ... not the caretaker on duty, not responsible for everything [...].”(FGM7, 00:27:45)
“So we give impetus, we create the framework, we create the system. So, it is not just one-off here and there, it is also a strategic task.”(FGM7, 00:28:36)
“Because I think it’s unhealthy if it slides into a women’s topic because the more women, so from my experience, if only women work on a topic, then it can backfire. And if only men work on a topic it can also backfire. So, I stand for this mixture, which should be carried out. Simply because men are a bit more objective, men are a bit, how should I put it, not more structured, women are too, but they have a different view of the procedure or processes or whatever, and women are more emotional.”(FGM1 00:23:54)
“So, it’s actually female-dominated. It’s currently a career field that more women are taking up. Personally, I would make it more dependent on the characteristics of the person and I think it’s also important that enough men come on board. Just to keep both perspectives in mind.”(FGM2, 00:21:44)
5.2. Experiences with Respect to Role and Reception
“I see myself a bit as a good soul or friend of the team, so often when someone has a problem, which now and then I can’t understand either, […], as a young Scrum Master, then have to deal with situations.”(SM1, 00:40:52)
“…as a male IT worker, I am also more easily accepted in a male IT environment than some who, I don’t know, doesn’t have any idea what they are doing, yeah, finished with sport and now I’d like to do FGM, someone like that has a harder time getting their foot in the door of course.…”(FGM3, 00:09:51)
“[…] and unfortunately, that’s also the most common reaction in the last 5/6 years that we’ve been doing this with people who hear it for the first time, they get a fit of laughter at first […]”(FGM3, 00:15:32)
“The first thing you always have to do is explain what it is, and that’s the first hurdle to even listening to it. Happiness or whatever they are called is no better. As long as the topic is not integrated into New Work, it will not be perceived. It is a building block of New Work. I personally try to communicate it like this.”(FGM4, 00:11:50)
“…So I sometimes call us ninjas, we’re little feel-good ninjas running around the place….”(FGM3, 00:26:05)
“Many managers simply do it and don’t even ask about the figures because they are convinced that it is justified. There are many who simply say yes, we’ll do it, because it has a positive effect, without asking exactly about the figures and data facts.”(FGM7, 00:15:51)
“So strategic collaboration with management, where are we going, what’s the culture, what did we envision there, but that we’re actually extremely close to employees.”(FGM3, 00:28:54)
“I define the feel-good manager as the scrum master on the enterprise level.”(FGM3, 00:03:20)
“If you say you are FGM and they come with a smile or a smirk, then you also know, ah well, he doesn’t know what it’s actually about. That is, we actually need this educational work and clearly the terminology is not so easy in this area or in this circle, in the circle of people who just pick it up and translate it one to one with feel-good manager, it is difficult.”(FGM7, 00:35:10)
5.3. Self-Efficacy Expectations of Scrum Master and Feel-Good Managers
“I fell as a kind of a lightning rod for the team. (…) I have to take care of the teams, its impediments, its duties and somehow its feelings.”(SM8, 00:25:11 (…) 00:25:39)
“It seems that some managers do not know what a Scrum Master can do and what he cannot do. So I have to explain it again and again. That’s a bit weird sometimes but that’s ok. The most important thing is that I myself and the team are knowing what I have to do.”(SM1, 00:22:45)
“I did the business coach first and that brought people to the forefront and also through that happiness I understood what feel-good management does. What I always felt finally got a name. There were things that I felt or realized that a company needs something like that, that it depends on something like that to have a good corporate culture or a harmonious one, and with feel-good management it got a name.”(FGM4, 00:01:58)
“I was asked by participants in an NLP course if I could offer something like that. I like to motivate, but I also like to show how to do things differently so that everyone is doing well.”(FGM5, 00:04:01)
“Employees are often skeptical at the beginning, not about the feel-good management but about the company. […] But the employees give consistently positive feedback afterwards are glad that exactly this topic is addressed, a jolt goes through the company and a different cooperation takes place.”(FGM1, 00:28:28)
“The staff wants all kinds of things that would be nice, and the company has to see how it can be paid for, and whether it fits into our budget. So that’s a very important factor in the job. And that’s a good thing to mediate.”(FGM2, 00:30:12)
For an overview regarding of the two roles studied and the findings from our analysed data, Table 2. Provides a comparison of the function, duties, occupational status, gender ascriptions, chances as well as risks of the positions of SM and FGM.“If the openness on the part of the managing director is not there, I am either not hired, or they hire you anyway and say but leave me alone with the thing. I don’t do that then, so I don’t accept the assignment, so the openness has to be there from the CEO, I always talk about the degree of maturity, and of course the employees also have to have a certain openness there.”(FGM7, 00:49:54)
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Glas ceiling effect means that the share of women in leadership positions is lower than on average in all sectors. |
2 | Gender pay gap means that female employees on average earn less than their male colleagues even if they have the same position and the same qualifications. |
Table Content | Corporation | SME |
---|---|---|
Qualitative interviews | 17 | 17 |
Workshops | 6 | 3 |
Scrum Master | Feel-Good Manager | |
---|---|---|
Function | Supporting expert and coach of the development team, servant leadership | Strategic management, servant leadership |
Duties | Facilitate communication, cooperation; Removing impediments for the team; Protecting the team from external interruptions or distractions Taking care of Scrum processes | Affecting attitudes of employees regarding motivation, satisfaction, culture at work; working with employees on solutions with respect to their individuality, personality and demands |
Occupational status | Dual internal role | Dual external role |
Gender ascriptions | “Carer”, “Mother of the company”, expert among experts | caring and emotional approach, female attracting position, good fairy |
Chances | Gender Diversity in the ITC-sector | Gender diversity in managerial levels |
Risks | Reproducing current gender structures in the ICT-sector | Reproduction of Gender stereotypes, wrong outer reception |
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Tihlarik, A.; Sauer, S. New Management Approaches in Digitized Work as the Cure for Inequality? Soc. Sci. 2021, 10, 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040124
Tihlarik A, Sauer S. New Management Approaches in Digitized Work as the Cure for Inequality? Social Sciences. 2021; 10(4):124. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040124
Chicago/Turabian StyleTihlarik, Amelie, and Stefan Sauer. 2021. "New Management Approaches in Digitized Work as the Cure for Inequality?" Social Sciences 10, no. 4: 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040124
APA StyleTihlarik, A., & Sauer, S. (2021). New Management Approaches in Digitized Work as the Cure for Inequality? Social Sciences, 10(4), 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040124