Asian Management and Business Review
Volume 6 Issue 1, 2026

Blend the demand: Micro-breaks as a pathway to work engagement

Septiawan, Fajar Eryanto (Unknown)
Salsabil, Imanirrahma (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
02 Feb 2026

Abstract

This study examines the role of micro-breaks as a mediator between perceived job demand and work engagement. Additionally, it explores the moderating effect of micro-break climate to investigate whether a supportive work culture enhances or hinders employees’ ability to take effective breaks. Using a quantitative approach, survey data is collected from 228 startup employees across various roles. Structural equation modeling (SEM) is employed to analyze the relationships among perceived job demand, micro-breaks, micro-break climate, and work engagement. The findings indicate that high perceived job demand negatively affects work engagement. Additionally, perceived job demand can affect employees to take micro-breaks, while a positive micro-break climate could mitigate this effect by fostering a supportive environment for break-taking. Furthermore, a high micro-break climate strengthens the positive impact of micro-breaks on work engagement. This study extends the conservation of resources (COR) theory by demonstrating how micro-breaks serve as a recovery mechanism in high-demand work settings. It also highlights micro-break climate as boundary condition and contextual resource that shapes the effectiveness of micro-breaks. Organizations should cultivate a positive micro-break climate by encouraging short breaks without stigma. Such environment can help employees maintain engagement even under high job demands. Since this study is cross-sectional, future research should employ longitudinal designs to better understand the long-term effects of micro-breaks. Additionally, future studies could explore how these findings generalize to other industries with different job demands and workplace cultures.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

AMBR

Publisher

Subject

Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Social Sciences

Description

Asian Management and Business Review (AMBR) is a peer-review journal published twice a year (February and August) by Master of Management, Department of Management, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia. AMBR addresses the broad area of management applied and its practices ...