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Work organisation

Work organisation is about the division of labour, the coordination and control of work: how work is divided into job tasks, bundling of tasks into jobs and assignments, interdependencies between workers, and how work is coordinated and controlled to fulfil the goals of the organisation. It encompasses the tasks performed, who performs them and how they are performed in the process of making a product or providing a service. Work organisation thus refers to how work is planned, organised and managed within companies and to choices on a range of aspects such as work processes, job design, responsibilities, task allocation, work scheduling, work pace, rules and procedures, and decision-making processes. 

Topic

Recent updates

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O termo «trabalho híbrido» foi popularizado com o aumento do teletrabalho durante a pandemia de COVID-19, quando as empresas e os trabalhadores começaram a discutir formas de organização do trabalho...

25 Maio 2023
Publication
Research report
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O relatório explora cenários plausíveis e concebíveis, analisando a forma como o teletrabalho e o trabalho híbrido na UE se poderão desenvolver até 2035 e as suas implicações para o...

28 Abril 2023
Publication
Research report

Policy pointers

  • Many jobs still offer little autonomy and few challenges: in 36% of EU27 establishments, a small proportion of workers (less than one in five) can organise their work autonomously, and in 42%, a similarly small proportion are in a job requiring problem-solving.
  • Establishments offering jobs with high levels of complexity and autonomy to most of their workers score highest on both workplace well-being and establishment performance. Differences in workplace well-being are particularly pronounced.
  • Nearly half of employees (47%) working in a high-involvement organisation report a high level of work engagement, almost double the share working in a low-involvement organisation (24%). The greater scope for decision-making in high-involvement organisations is intrinsically motivating.
  • A high-involvement organisation provides more opportunity for both formal and informal skill development, but it is particularly strongly associated with informal skill development. 

Eurofound research

Eurofound research examines the different ways in which work is organised across organisations and their potential effects on productivity, efficiency and competitiveness, as well as on working conditions, worker well-being and the sustainability of work over the life course. Research finds that some types of work organisation are associated with a better quality of work and employment. These, more people-centred, forms of work organisation emphasise the value of teamwork, skills use and skills development, as well as employee involvement and autonomy. 

Data collection on work organisation

Eurofound monitors developments in work organisation and workplace practices, based on its Europe-wide surveys and on national-level data collection by the Network of Eurofound Correspondents.

Aspects of work organisation are a key element in the European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS), focusing in particular on those aspects of work organisation that are linked with job quality and well-being at work.

Using EWCS data, the European Restructuring Monitor has considered the effects of restructuring on work organisation outcomes such as work intensification, autonomy, access to training, formal work assessment and teamwork.

The European Company Survey (ECS) is the only EU-wide establishment survey that encompasses a wide range of questions about work organisation, skills use and skills development, human resource management, direct employee involvement and social dialogue. Eurofound collaborated with sister agency Cedefop to carry out the ECS 2019, which covers aspects of work organisation, looking at job complexity and autonomy, spanning teamwork and problem-solving, as well as at collaboration and outsourcing.

Impact of digitalisation, new forms of employment and COVID-19

Work organisation has an impact on various aspects of the quality of work and employment, such as physical risk factors, working time, intensity of work, flexibility and satisfaction with working conditions, and also affects establishment performance. Eurofound research therefore looks at changes in the different forms of work organisation, including new methods of organising work resulting from a higher use of digital solutions

For instance, Eurofound looks into the emerging new forms of employment that are transforming work organisation and work patterns. A collaboration with the International Labour Organization (ILO) has also analysed the impact of new information and communications technologies (ICT) on work and life, examining the increasing use of telework and ICT-based mobile work and what this means for work organisation, working time, health, and well-being, as well as work–life balance. 

The COVID-19 pandemic was another important driver of changes in the way work is organised. When discussing ways of organising work after the pandemic, the focus is around hybrid forms of work organisation. Eurofound research looks at the main features of hybrid work, aiming to determine if this form of work reflects an evolution of earlier remote work and telework or a transition to a qualitatively new form of work.

Eurofound’s EU PolicyWatch collates information on the responses of government and social partners to the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and rising inflation, and collects examples of company practices to deal with changes in work organisation. Research using the ECS 2019 and a follow-up edition of the survey that was carried out in 2020 analysed the impact of COVID-19 on workplace practices in companies. Other studies, using information collected though Eurofound’s Network of European Correspondents, documented the measures agreed in two sectors severely disrupted by the crisis – hospitals and civil aviation – such as the adaptation of work organisation to secure greater capacity.

Importance of work organisation for companies and workers

Analysis of ECS data explores the links between innovations in work organisation and the potential benefits for both employees and organisations, such as optimising production processes and improving the overall experience of work. It shows that well-functioning social dialogue and direct employee involvement can also make a valuable contribution to the implementation of innovation in the workplace, creating potential win–win arrangements for workers and their employers. 

More recent analysis of the ECS 2019 data examined the link between skills and company performance, and how workplace practices related to work organisation affect this association. This analysis showed that businesses with a culture that values employees are more likely to put workplace practices in place that ensure that employees have the appropriate skills, have the opportunities to use these skills and are motivated to do so, resulting in better establishment performance. These results make a clear business case for applying a people-centred approach to job design and work organisation. 

EU context

Work organisation is a key element underpinning economic and business development, with important consequences for productivity, innovation, working conditions and worker-well-being. Promoting certain forms of work organisation contributes to attaining the objectives set by the European Commission’s European Skills Agenda for sustainable competitiveness, social fairness and resilience launched on 1 July 2020 and its workplace innovation projects. These objectives aim to move Europe towards a more competitive knowledge-based economy, centred on a skilled workforce and innovation – not only in products and processes, but also in the organisation of work and quality of work standards, as it transitions to a digital and carbon-neutral economy. The European Commission dedicated 2023 as the European Year of Skills to support skills development and help companies to address skills shortages in the EU.

Workplace innovation and the link with how work is organised can happen in a variety of ways including changes in business structure and business models, human resources management, relationships with clients and suppliers, or in the work environment itself. Social dialogue also has an important role to play in the organisation of work aimed at fostering employee potential, as highlighted in theEU Directive on informing and consulting employees. The European Pillar of Social Rights reiterates the importance of social dialogue and involving workers in processes related to work organisation.

Key outputs

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The term ‘hybrid work’ was popularised with the upsurge of telework during the COVID-19 pandemic, when companies and employees started to discuss ways of organising work after the crisis. The...

25 Maio 2023
Publication
Research report
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Research into the transformative potential of the digital revolution tends to take a quantitative approach in an attempt to monitor changes in employment levels due to digitalisation. The fear of...

25 Outubro 2021
Publication
Research report

Data and resources

Related data and resources on this topic are linked below.

 

European Industrial Relations Dictionary 

Eurofound expert(s)

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Gijs van Houten is a senior research manager in the Employment unit at Eurofound. He has specific expertise in cross-national survey methodology and the analysis of workplace...

Senior research manager,
Employment research unit
Publications results (159)

O termo «trabalho híbrido» foi popularizado com o aumento do teletrabalho durante a pandemia de COVID-19, quando as empresas e os trabalhadores começaram a discutir formas de organização do trabalho após a crise. O termo tem sido cada vez mais utilizado para designar situações em que o trabalho (em

25 May 2023

O relatório explora cenários plausíveis e concebíveis, analisando a forma como o teletrabalho e o trabalho híbrido na UE se poderão desenvolver até 2035 e as suas implicações para o mundo do trabalho. Em que medida estão os superiores hierárquicos e os trabalhadores, as organizações patronais e os

28 April 2023

Os recursos humanos contribuem, através das suas competências, para o êxito de uma organização. De acordo com o modelo de capacidade, motivação e oportunidade (CMO), as contribuições dos trabalhadores para o desempenho organizacional dependem das suas competências, da motivação para destas tirar

30 March 2023

O presente relatório analisa o papel do diálogo social e da negociação coletiva na resposta aos desafios que o setor da aviação civil enfrentou durante a pandemia de COVID-19. O envolvimento dos parceiros sociais nas medidas introduzidas para atenuar os impactos negativos da pandemia varia entre

01 December 2022

Este relatório analisa o papel do diálogo social e da negociação coletiva na abordagem dos desafios criados ou exacerbados pela pandemia de COVID-19 no setor hospitalar. Também explora se o diálogo social e os processos de negociação coletiva existentes a nível nacional foram adaptados a fim de

01 December 2022

O presente relatório visa identificar e analisar a legislação e a negociação coletiva em matéria de teletrabalho nos 27 Estados-Membros e na Noruega. Destaca as principais diferenças e semelhanças entre os países no que diz respeito à legislação em matéria de teletrabalho e às recentes alterações a

01 September 2022

Despite the well-known adverse effects of regular long working hours on workers’ health, well-being and performance, many workers in the EU continue to work beyond their normal hours. Part of this additional working time is classified as overtime. This report takes a comparative overview of how

10 March 2022

O presente relatório visa ajudar as empresas europeias a enfrentar os desafios da pandemia da COVID-19. A tónica reside nas práticas e características do local de trabalho que ajudaram as empresas em toda a UE a desenvolver a sua resistência operacional, mantendo ao mesmo tempo os trabalhadores e os

09 December 2021

A investigação sobre o potencial transformador da revolução digital tende a adotar uma abordagem quantitativa numa tentativa de monitorizar as mudanças nos níveis de emprego decorrentes da digitalização. O receio de potenciais perdas de postos de trabalho e de perturbações negativas provocadas pelas

25 October 2021

The economic and labour market contribution of international businesses is well recognised, but policymakers could do more to help such enterprises to develop their activities. This policy brief explores the workplace practices in export-oriented establishments that may contribute to their success

06 October 2021

Online resources results (249)

Union examines EMU, employment and industrial relations in banking

EMU membership will mean that employment will decline in Greek banking and that the sector's industrial relations will need to be altered in the direction of a consultative model. These are the conclusions of a study completed in April 1999 by the Institute of Labour of the Greek Federation of Bank

New technologies, employment and skills in the fertiliser industry

The Institute of Labour of the Greek General Confederation of Labour (INE/GSEE) presented a survey on "technological changes in jobs and skills in the Greek fertiliser industry" in March 1999. We summarise the key results of the survey, mainly as regards the characteristics of work in the industry

Volkswagen challenges collective reduction of working hours at Forest-Brussels

The rescue plan for the Volkswagen Forest-Brussels factory published in January 1999 is still under discussion in May 1999. The main obstacles are the management's challenge to the agreement on collective reductions in working hours negotiated in 1997, and the proposed reduced levels of employment

National Labour Council approves collective agreement on job-related stress

On 30 March 1999, the bipartite National Labour Council (Conseil National du Travail/National Arbeidsraad, CNT/NAR), bringing together representatives of trade unions and employers' organisations, approved a new intersectoral collective agreement on combating stress at work. The proposal follows up

New government's programme largely welcomed by social partners

Following elections in March 1999, a new government was formed in Finland in April. It continues the previous "rainbow "coalition, consisting of the Social Democratic Party, the conservative National Coalition Party, the Left-Wing Alliance, the Greens and the Swedish People's Party. The social

Roché report examines civil servants' working time

The "Roché report on French civil servants' working time", published in February 1999, has revealed considerable diversity in their working conditions, sometimes approaching inequality, which is deemed by the reports' authors as prejudicial to both the efficiency of the public service and the

New provisions introduced on the organisation of working time

In February 1999, intensive negotiations between Luxembourg's social partners culminated in a new law that maintains the principle of a normal eight-hour working day and 40-hour week, though within a statutory four-week reference period. A work organisation plan will have to be negotiated at

Growing numbers of employment pacts at establishment level

Against the background of persistent high unemployment, the issue of employment security has become one of the most important topics in German industrial relations (TN9710201S [1]). In recent years a growing number of so-called "employment pacts" (Beschäftigungspakte) have been agreed, in particular

New era in sectoral social dialogue takes shape

The European Commission has always placed significant emphasis on the social dialogue between employers' organisation and trade unions, given that the development of the European Union and its policies has a significant impact on employers and employees, while at the same time depending on public

New issues emerge in 1999 banking bargaining round

On 12 December 1998, negotiations opened for a new collective agreement for the 75,000 salaried employees in Austrian banking, due to take effect from 1 February 1999. The banks offered a pay increase of 1.1%, roughly equivalent to the rate of inflation. This position was maintained in further


Blogs results (6)
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As we leave behind the lockdowns and business disruptions of COVID-19 and enter a ‘new normal’, it is time to talk about how workplaces might be transformed to drive innovation. Some may baulk at this suggestion, as we continue to grapple with the pandemic fallout, but crises have always been a

28 Junho 2021
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COVID-19 has shown that some things can hit us out of the blue. The pandemic sent a shockwave through businesses all over the world and has brought massive changes to work organisation, internal communication and day-to-day operations for many companies. Doubtless, the depth of the pandemic’s impact

21 Junho 2021
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The COVID-19 pandemic compelled governments to take exceptional measures to monitor and control the spread of the Coronavirus. Among them was the introduction in most EU Member States of tracking apps to gather data on citizens who have contracted the virus and to trace their contacts, a measure

13 Janeiro 2021
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After more than 60 years of European policy on the equal treatment of women and men, men still outnumber women in management positions by almost two to one. The women who do make it into management are more likely to be in non-supervising management roles where they manage operational

7 Março 2019
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Manual jobs in European manufacturing are being transformed as blue-collar workers take on more intellectual tasks. This is a consequence of the increasing use of digital tools and the growing importance of quality control in production. The severe losses of middle-paying jobs in the manufacturing

27 Setembro 2018
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In the digital age, there are fewer routine jobs because of a higher risk of automation. But a great paradox of this age is this: workers in most types of jobs, including high-skilled ones, are reporting higher levels of routine at work. This emerges from a new study of the task content of

28 Setembro 2016
Upcoming publications results (1)

This policy brief investigates how organisations are adapting their work organisation and practices to hybrid work. Based on case studies and on data from the European Working Conditions Survey 2024, the policy brief examines how hybrid work is being managed in organisations and profiles t

April 2025

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