Emotional Labour among Women Leaders within the South African Consulting Industry: A Hermeneutic Phenomenological Inquiry

Authors

  • Reevasha Pillay University of South Africa
  • Aden-Paul Flotman University of South Africa http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5663-7279
  • Jeremy Mitonga-Monga Johannesburg Business School College of Business and Economics

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/1998-8125/4280

Keywords:

deep acting, emotion regulation, emotional labour, consulting industry, commercial value, surface acting, women in leadership

Abstract

The opinion that the workplace should be viewed as a rational environment is being swiftly dismantled by acknowledging and harnessing the power of emotions in favour of individual and organisational outcomes. This study explored the lived experiences of emotional labour among women leaders in the consulting industry in South Africa. A qualitative study was conducted and informed by the hermeneutic phenomenological perspective. Data were gathered through in-depth, unstructured interviews with eight women leaders resident in the Gauteng Province, South Africa. The data gathered were analysed by applying a hermeneutic phenomenological analysis, and interpreted from a work- and personally related emotional labour stance. The empirical findings suggest that these women leaders enjoy very little work-life balance, which is accepted as common practice in this industry. Role complexity and personal life obligations result in role conflict. Their emotional wellbeing is adversely affected, which manifests in guilt, loneliness, loss of identity, alienation, shame and the emotional exhaustion they experience. Furthermore, it seems that adequate organisational support is not experienced by women leaders in this volatile, highly pressured emotional context. This study contributes to the field of Industrial and Organisational Psychology, the literature on emotional labour, as well as human resource practices such as talent management, retention strategies and the career management of women leaders in the consulting industry by making suggestions for human resource practices and future research.

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Author Biographies

Reevasha Pillay, University of South Africa

University of South Africa
Department of Industrial and Organisational Psychology

Jeremy Mitonga-Monga, Johannesburg Business School College of Business and Economics

Department of Industrial Psychology and People Management

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Published

2019-05-24

How to Cite

Pillay, Reevasha, Aden-Paul Flotman, and Jeremy Mitonga-Monga. 2019. “Emotional Labour Among Women Leaders Within the South African Consulting Industry: A Hermeneutic Phenomenological Inquiry”. Southern African Business Review 23:23 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/1998-8125/4280.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2018-05-04
Accepted 2019-01-08
Published 2019-05-24