• Frog-Brawler@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    I skimmed through it real quick, but I didn’t see anything where they defined how they measured productivity. Did I miss that part?

      • Catarinalina@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        No need for the \s. That is literally how they did this “study”. I’d be interested to see who it was that paid for this bullshit, wouldn’t be surprised to see the money trail leading back to commercial real estate.

        The article boasts the headline front and center % productivity loss, as though this was some years long extensive study. The section of the report discussing these results is less than two paragraphs long. I’ve seen high school students put together a more detailed a well researched study.

        What bothers me the most is that people will readily reference this article and spread this bullshit everywhere, with basically no one having read the study or put any critical thinking into this at all.

        • Valmond@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Ouch you are right, people will see headlines and slowly stop being so sure…

          And yeah, to find the criminal, follow the money.

    • shackled@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      I dig through the paper and the study literally looked at two sectors and job types. So let’s just extrapolate that too all workers right 🙄

      “Remote working appears to lower average productivity by around 10% to 20%. Emmanuel and Harrington (2023) use data from a Fortune 500 firm which had both in-person and remote call centers pre-pandemic. The firm shifted all workers to fully remote in April 2020 at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Using the always remote call-centers as the control group they find an 8% reduction in call volumes among employees who shifted from fully in-person to fully remote work. Gibbs, Mengel and Siemroth (2022) examine IT professionals in a large Indian technology company who shifted to fully remote work at the onset of the pandemic. Measured performance among these workers remained constant while remote but they worked longer hours, implying a drop in employee productivity of 8% to 19%. Atkin, Schoar, and Shinde (2023) run a randomized control trial of data-entry workers in India, randomizing between working fully in the office and fully at home. They find home-workers are 18% less productive.”

      • Frog-Brawler@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        Yea that’s still not indicating how they measure productivity. It actually does highlight an increase in efficiency though; if there’s an 8% decrease in call volumes, that is a correlation to end users not needing to call in multiple times.