The increasing integration of digital infrastructure in contemporary workplaces has facilitated the rise of cyberloafing, defined as employees’ engagement in non-task-related online activity. Concurrently, workplace boredom has evolved as a critical psychological state influencing employee behaviour, yet its theoretical linkage with cyberloafing remains underexplored. This study develops a conceptual framework to examine how workplace boredom leads to cyberloafing by integrating the Job Characteristics Model and Affective Events Theory. Drawing on these theoretical perspectives, the paper argues that poorly designed jobs characterized by low skill variety, limited autonomy, and repetitive tasks create conditions that contribute to boredom among employees. In turn, boredom, as an adverse emotional experience, triggers behavioural responses aimed at coping with under-stimulation, with cyberloafing emerging as a readily accessible outlet in digitally enabled work environments. The study reconceptualizes cyberloafing not merely as a deviant behaviour but as a context-driven response to deficiencies in job design and affective experiences. By linking structural job characteristics, psychological states, and behavioural outcomes, the proposed framework contributes to organizational behaviour literature and provides a foundation for future empirical research examining employee behaviour in modern workplaces.
Nidhi Singh (Fri,) studied this question.