Wong, George Yui-LamGeorge Yui-LamWongKwok, Ron Chi-WaiRon Chi-WaiKwokZhang, ShanshanShanshanZhangDr. LAI GabrielCheung, Jessica Choi-FungJessica Choi-FungCheung2024-09-042024-09-042023Information & Management, 2023, vol. 60(2), article no. 103752.0378-72061872-7530http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/10415Currently, people are accustomed to cyberloafing, or nonwork-related cyber activities during working hours, and cyber-life-interruption, or work-related cyber activities during nonworking hours. Job or personal demands no longer rely on either work- or nonwork-related domain resources. We propose a dynamic demands-resources model regarding cyberloafing and cyber-life-interruption to elucidate their direct and interaction effects on work and nonwork exhaustion. By identifying these dynamics, this study can enable both employees and employers to utilize these activities for better management of employee experiences in the technology-enabled flexible working environment, which, in turn, would bring about significant implications for employee job performance.enMutually complementary effects of cyberloafing and cyber-life-interruption on employee exhaustionPeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1016/j.im.2022.103752