‘Always Being On’: Exploring the Experience of Burnout Among Female Professionals in the Australian Public Relations Industry

Jade Bilowol, Jenny A. Robinson, Deborah Wise, Marianne Sison

Research output: Book chapter/Published conference paperChapter

Abstract

Career burnout is prevalent in the PR industry, precisely when demand for professionals is increasing. While career burnout has been included in studies and theorising on professionalism and feminisation, issues with turnover and burnout remain. Using a grounded theory approach, this qualitative study draws upon the lived experiences of 30 current and former female Australian PR professionals to gain an understanding of how they perceive signs of career burnout and the factors that contribute to it. Career burnout is an occupational syndrome whereby someone gradually morphs from being highly motivated in their role to emotionally exhausted, cynical and/or experiencing feelings of failure. It is a protracted response to chronic workplace demands and stressors, and includes three dimensions: emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation and reduced personal accomplishment. It is specifically a workplace phenomenon, distinguished from anxiety and depression, which can emerge in any context. A key contributor to career burnout were PR-specific workplace stressors that were perceived to stem from a lack of respect for, or understanding of, PR as a profession. The stressors included the need to'prove the spend'of PR, unreasonable deadlines, clients disregarding advice or counsel, as well as broader societal perceptions of PR as 'spin doctors'. This often led to the PR practitioner undertaking work that went against their own advice or resulted in unsuccessful organisational outcomes they felt could have been avoided had their advice been listened to and valued. The workplace factors contributing to burnout overlap in complex ways and the study supports the idea that burnout is a product of situational contexts, despite being acutely felt at the individual level.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationWomen’s Work in Public Relations
PublisherEmerald Publishing
Pages129-145
Number of pages17
ISBN (Electronic)9781804555385
ISBN (Print)9781804555408
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Mar 2024

Publication series

NameWomen’s Work in Public Relations

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