“I’m not comfortable imagining what my colleagues are thinking when I am at another meeting at my daughter’s school”
(Oriol, 36, Purchasing manager, 3 children)
“We have flexibility policies available to us. They’re new, they were implemented a couple of months ago. There have always been things written on paper, but now we have received an email stating that we have to take care of the work-life balance within the company. It was very neutral, addressed to everyone. But the truth is that not everyone applies it, nor do they believe it “
(Gabriel, 38, Marketing manager, 2 children)
“Companies have ‘official’ policies and ‘real’ policies”
(Bernat, 35, consultant, 1 child)
Among the barriers hindering work-life balance, some are visible and relatively easy to reverse, such as the lack of flexibility policies. With a certain amount of willingness and coordination, new flexibility policies can be offered relatively quickly in order to improve employees’ personal and professional responsibilities. Policies need to be well articulated, necessary resources need to be considered, who can benefit from them needs to be defined, and all this needs to be conveyed. For example, if you want to offer flexible working hours, you must think about a flexible entry and exit schedule, whether you are going to monitor time or not, which part of the staff can make use of such measures, and eventually communicate it in the most efficient way possible.
However, there are much more subtle, invisible and difficult barriers to overcome. And one of these barriers is the lack of legitimacy. Suchman defines legitimacy in organizations as a widespread perception that a person’s actions are desired and appropriate in a particular organization’s system of values, beliefs, and norms. Therefore, if legitimacy exists, there is also a lack of legitimacy that would be just the opposite, that is, a widespread perception that a person’s actions are not desired and appropriate in the value system, beliefs, and norms of a particular organization.
Flexibility policies: a real vision
The first two quotes from the beginning of the text, corresponding to a study on the perceived barriers to reconciliation, invite us to see clearly this possible lack of legitimacy in the use of flexibility through the voices of two employees. In the case of Oriol, we observe that he does not feel comfortable attending school meetings during working hours even though he has the possibility to do so. The fact that flexibility policies exist does not prevent the rest of the colleagues from perceiving it as something inappropriate to make use of, even though they are legitimate. It is a really interesting topic: how can you perceive as inappropriate an action that the company promotes?
Gabriel’s case also reinforces the argument of lack of legitimacy. He reports that his company offers new policies of flexibility, but “neither everyone applies it nor believes it”. In other words, even with the efforts on the part of many organisations to offer more labour flexibility policies than ever before, these may be underused because of lack of legitimacy.