this post was submitted on 18 Mar 2024
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[–] westyvw@lemm.ee 2 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

Feel free to post this evidence that wfh is not more productive. Everything I have seen has unusual metrics or seems obvious that a conclusion was reached based on what the purchaser of the study wanted.

Wfh is better for documentation and stops side work nobody knows about because you bake it into your business.

Creating a document? Better have Metadata and a reason, and stored publicly. No one off excel sheets, or emailed word docs.

Wikis and collaborative tools are used in the open by everyone, as well as dashboarding and production metrics. Clear defined work processes and workflows are a must.

What happens in hybrid, is people start doing the sticky notes, using email, word of mouth work, and undocumented training/knowledge share.

By publicly. I mean internally, all workers should have access to, and edit rights to, all knowledge.

[–] EatATaco@lemm.ee 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

https://web.archive.org/web/20240316183946/https:/fortune.com/2023/07/06/remote-workers-less-productive-wfh-research/

There is nothing about working from home or hybrid that limits nor enables your ability to implement all of the policies you've listed out.

It seems to me that your defeating your whole point by arguing that because wfh has some shortcomings you have to implement extra policies to make it work, which makes work better. But what would probably be just as good would be implementing those things with a hybrid schedule.

[–] westyvw@lemm.ee 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

The point is that you can't measure productivity if there is no effort to actually make it work. At that point hybrid is just as bad.

The article was interesting, and this stood out:

In many of the studies we cite and in some of our own survey evidence, workers often get more done when remote simply because they save time from the daily commute and from other office distractions,” Barrero tells Fortune. “This can make them look more productive on a ‘per day’ basis, even if it means they’re actually less productive on a ‘per hour’ basis.

So why does per hour win over per day? I would rather be productive each day and manage my own time over an hour by hour basis.

Which leads to another key point in productivity: asynchronous work. Hybrid and in office tends to go back to synchronous work, which in itself is not productive.