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From Work-Life Balance to Integration: Shifting Perceptions in High-Tech

Author

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  • Pinto, Zeala

    (Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi, Faculty of Economics and Business Administration)

Abstract

This paper examines the shift from work-life balance rhetoric to work-life integration practice in high-tech, using Israeli firms closely coupled to United States time zones as a critical case. Drawing on a mixed-methods design that combines nineteen semi-structured interviews with engineers, product leaders, recruiters, and executives with survey data from 219 women across the Israeli high-tech sector, the study synthesizes classic lenses of work-family conflict and enrichment, boundary fit, and job demands-resources theory with current organizational realities such as hybrid work and return-to-office policies. The analysis identifies a practical core to integration: temporal equity. Outcomes depend less on total hours and more on four conditions operating together: usable schedule control, boundary fit between preferences and team routines, contained connectivity load so that evenings do not become shadow stand-ups, and credit decoupled from live presence through artifacts such as recorded demos, written kudos, and sponsor-of-record practices. Interviews reveal how Israeli-U.S. coordination creates a recurrent time-zone tax, how mental load extends beyond leave into daily logistics, and how simple routines (protected family bands with written exceptions, mirrored ceremonies across time zones, rota audits for late hours) reduce friction without slowing delivery. Men's planned co-ownership of care appears as a small but notable cultural shift. Quantitative data triangulate these themes: 72% of surveyed women cite work-life time constraints as the primary barrier preventing participation in professional meetups, and 36% report that personal obligations have prevented them from pursuing advancement opportunities. The paper contributes a clear, practice-oriented temporal equity lens on integration and specifies low-cost routines that teams can adopt. Managing when work happens and how recognition is earned, rather than only where work occurs, enables the same total hours to sustain careers without taxing family life.

Suggested Citation

  • Pinto, Zeala, 2026. "From Work-Life Balance to Integration: Shifting Perceptions in High-Tech," CrossCultural Management Journal, Fundația Română pentru Inteligența Afacerii, Editorial Department, vol. 28(1), pages 89-99, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:cmj:journl:y:2026:i:1:p:89-99
    DOI: 10.70147/c288999
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    Keywords

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    JEL classification:

    • J16 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Demographic Economics - - - Economics of Gender; Non-labor Discrimination
    • J22 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Demand and Supply of Labor - - - Time Allocation and Labor Supply
    • J28 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Demand and Supply of Labor - - - Safety; Job Satisfaction; Related Public Policy
    • M12 - Business Administration and Business Economics; Marketing; Accounting; Personnel Economics - - Business Administration - - - Personnel Management; Executives; Executive Compensation
    • O33 - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth - - Innovation; Research and Development; Technological Change; Intellectual Property Rights - - - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes

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