Appreciation from colleagues can help employees cope with negative experiences at work, according to a study involving the University of East Anglia (UEA).

Researchers found that employees experience ‘embitterment’ - an emotional response to perceived workplace injustice - on days when they are assigned more unreasonable tasks than usual.

This negative emotion not only affects their work but also spills over into their personal lives, leading to an increase in rumination, the repetitive dwelling on negative feelings and their causes. This can result in difficulty detaching from work, ultimately preventing recovery from job-related stress.

The findings have also revealed that this harmful cycle takes place mainly on days when employees receive less appreciation from their colleagues than usual.

The authors said it emphasises the importance of workplace recognition in mitigating the emotional toll of perceived ‘illegitimate’ tasks that are considered as unnecessary and/or unreasonable, and how this can help protect employees’ wellbeing.

George Michaelides, co-author and professor of work psychology at UEA’s Norwich Business School, said, “Our findings underscore how assigning unreasonable tasks can violate employees' sense of fairness and harm their emotional wellbeing. It also emphasises the crucial role of supervisors in minimising such tasks and prioritising core responsibilities.

“Additionally, fostering a culture of appreciation among colleagues can serve as a protective factor, helping employees cope with workplace stress. Organisations can support this by equipping employees with the skills to express gratitude effectively, creating a more positive and resilient work environment.”

The study

Published in the journal Work & Stress, the study involved researchers from UEA, the University of Cyprus, and Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.

The team collected data from 71 employees using daily surveys over five working days. These surveys helped the researchers track individual’s feelings of embitterment, the degree to which they had to engage with illegitimate tasks, how much appreciation they felt from their colleagues and supervisors, and how much they thought about work during their time off.

Participants worked in different industry sectors, with most in accounting and finance.

The study highlights the dynamic nature of embitterment and suggests that unnecessary and unreasonable tasks are potential predictors of this emotion, which in turn can interfere with employees’ ability to recover from work during their time off.

Most importantly, it allowed the team to test the boundary conditions under which these relationships are stronger or weaker.

Unnecessary tasks could be those employees perceive as pointless and lacking relevance to their role - for example writing a report that no one will read - undermining their sense of purpose and value in the workplace.

Unreasonable tasks are often those employees consider exceed their role, capabilities, or responsibilities - such as asking a senior employee to perform a novice’s work - generating a sense of injustice because they might violate expectations of fairness and respect in the workplace.

Appreciation has been recognised as an important buffer to the effect of illegitimate tasks and the threat to professional identity an employee experiences when exposed to them. It refers to getting recognition for achievements and qualities by significant others at work, such as supervisors or colleagues.

Evie Michailidis, lead author from the University of Cyprus, commented, “The importance of appreciation for mitigating feelings of embitterment cannot be overstated. Without appreciation, unreasonable tasks foster feelings of embitterment that spill over into private lives, making it harder to mentally disconnect and recover after work."

Author: