Shifting Workplace Paradigms: Twitter Sentiment Insights on Work from Home

Author:

Haque Amlan1ORCID,Singh Kishore2,Kaphle Sabi3ORCID,Panchasara Heena4ORCID,Tseng Wen-Chun5

Affiliation:

1. School of Business & Law, CQUniversity, Sydney 2000, Australia

2. School of Business & Law, CQUniversity, Brisbane 4000, Australia

3. School of Health, Medical and Applied Sciences, CQUniversity, Melbourne 3000, Australia

4. School of Engineering and Technology, CQUniversity, Melbourne 3000, Australia

5. School of Engineering and Technology, CQUniversity, Cairns 4870, Australia

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced organisations to evaluate whether work from home (WFH) best fits future office management and employee productivity. The increasing popularity of web-based social media increases the possibility of using employees’ sentiment and opinion-mining techniques to track and monitor their preferences for WFH through Twitter. While social media platforms provide useful data-mining information about employee opinions, more research must be conducted to investigate the sentiment on Twitter of WFH employees. This paper meets this research demand by analysing a random sample of 755,882,104 tweets linked to employees’ opinions and beliefs regarding WFH. Moreover, an analysis of Google trends revealed a positive sentiment toward WFH. The results of this paper explore whether people (as employees) are enthusiastic and optimistic about WFH. This paper suggests that WFH has positive and supportive potential as an HRM strategy to increase workplace effectiveness for greater staff engagement and organisational sustainability.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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3. Foote, C., Nordhaus, W.D., and Rivers, D. (2020). The US Employment Situation Using the Yale Labor Survey, Yale University. Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers 2020, 2243. Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics.

4. Barrero, J.M., Bloom, N., and Davis, S.J. (2022, December 15). Why Working from Home Will Stick. Unpublished Manuscript. Available online: https://nbloom.people.stanford.edu/sites/g/files/sbiybj4746/f/why_wfh_stick1_0.pdf.

5. Work-from-home (WFH) during COVID-19 pandemic—A netnographic investigation using Twitter data;Daneshfar;Inf. Technol. People,2023

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