Cyberloafing in Organizations

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A01=Beata Bajcar
A01=Jolanta Babiak
Author_Beata Bajcar
Author_Jolanta Babiak
Category=GPS
Category=KJC
Category=KJMV2
Category=KJS
Category=KJU
Coping mechanisms
Counterproductive behavior
Cultural differences
Digital distractions
Employee well-being
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Human resources
Measurement tools
Performance outcomes
Stress management
Workplace productivity

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041225201
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines cyberloafing: employees’ use of internet-enabled technologies for personal purposes during paid working time. It addresses a familiar but often misunderstood feature of contemporary work: checking messages, browsing news, using social media, shopping online, or engaging in other non-work digital activity while at work. Rather than treating cyberloafing simply as wasted time or misconduct, the book shows that its meaning depends on context. It may signal boredom, overload, weak engagement, poor role clarity, lack of recovery, or, in some cases, more serious withdrawal from work. The book combines theoretical synthesis, measurement development, cross-cultural comparison, and empirical studies. It develops a clear conceptual framework, validates the CBLS-15 Cyberloafing Scale, and examines cyberloafing across different national contexts, including Poland, Italy, and the United States. It also considers how hybrid work, digital monitoring, and artificial intelligence are changing the boundaries between work, recovery, distraction, and disengagement. The practical contribution is a more balanced approach to managing personal internet use at work. The book argues that broad restrictions and close monitoring are often insufficient and may create additional problems. Instead, organizations need better diagnosis, work design, leadership practices, recovery structures, and ethically responsible digital governance.

Jolanta Babiak, PhD, is an assistant professor in psychology and organizational psychology at Wrocław University of Science and Technology, Poland. Her research focuses on leadership, organizational behavior, digital workplace behavior, and individual differences in work settings. She has published on cyberloafing, cyberchondria, leadership styles, personality, and psychometric scale development. Before entering academia, she held managerial roles in commercial real estate and the non-profit sector, which shaped her applied interest in employee behavior, well-being, and organizational functioning.

Beata Bajcar is an Associate Professor at Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, working at the Faculty of Management, Department of Psychology and Ergonomics. Her research interests include the human – technology interaction, causes and consequences of dysfunctional work and organizational behavior, and cyberdeviance, such as cyberloafing and cyberchondria. She has also researched psychological aspects of AI, especially AI overload and social influence and their determinants and consequences. In addition, she specializes in the development and validation of standardized questionnaires to measure leadership styles, strategic thinking, professional interests, work values, cyberloafing, cyberchondria, and temporal orientation.

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