Abstract
During the past years, academics have revised their earlier decision to omit the social dimensions of work from work design theory, realising that interpersonal interactions in the work setting are becoming more pervasive. Industry 4.0 , however, raises new question marks with respect to this pervasiveness. Terms such as big data, Internet of Things and augmented reality have the potential to lead to shifts in the status quo of the social context of work and implicit issue of thriving. This chapter therefore aims to analyse what developments can be observed with respect to the social context of work as a result of industry 4.0 . Findings from thirteen interviews conducted in four different organisations at two levels suggest that social interactions will not give into digital options. More importantly, they provide a wake-up call regarding the adoption of industry 4.0 and highlight two ways in which it influences the social context of work and human thriving.
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Notes
- 1.
These employees were: not self-employed, aged between 18 and 65 and worked a min. of 24 h a week.
- 2.
Implies a colleague from a competitor.
- 3.
We are aware that this respondent is used quite often in our discussion of the results. This interviewee, however, mentioned interesting yet unique insights. Likely as a result of his function and location: ‘I started as an ordinary software engineer and quickly became a lead engineer. From 2011, I am a bit of a project leader. Initially, we call our team “I IT” which stands for industrial IT—not the standard industrial automation but the layer above it. We deliberately called our team smart industry because we have a lot to do with that’ (R4).
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Appendix—Interview Protocol
Appendix—Interview Protocol
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Habraken, M., Bondarouk, T., Hoffmann, D. (2019). Shaking Up the Status Quo? An Analysis of Developments in the Social Context of Work Stemming from Industry 4.0. In: Coetzee, M. (eds) Thriving in Digital Workspaces. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-24463-7_10
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