Role integration is the new workplace reality for many employees. The prevalence of mobile technologies (e.g. laptops, smartphones, tablets) that are increasingly wearable and nearly always "on" makes it difficult to keep role boundaries separate and distinct. We draw upon boundary theory and construal level theory to hypothesize that role integration behaviors shift people from thinking concretely to thinking more abstractly about their work. The results of an archival study of Enron executives' emails, two experiments, and a multi-wave field study of knowledge workers provide evidence of positive associations between role integration behaviors, higher construal level, and more exploratory learning activities.We wish to thank Martine Haas and our three anonymous reviewers, the members of the OB work-in-progress seminar at Stern and the Trope lab at NYU, and Yaacov Trope, David Kalkstein, and Catherine Cramton for their valuable comments and suggestions on prior versions of this manuscript.
ABSTRACTRole integration is the new workplace reality for many employees. The prevalence of mobile technologies (e.g. laptops, smartphones, tablets) that are increasingly wearable and nearly always "on" makes it difficult to keep role boundaries separate and distinct. We draw upon boundary theory and construal level theory to hypothesize that role integration behaviors shift people from thinking concretely to thinking more abstractly about their work.The results of an archival study of Enron executives' emails, two experiments, and a multiwave field study of knowledge workers provide evidence of positive associations between role integration behaviors, higher construal level, and more exploratory learning activities.
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