Skip to main content
Hamburger Menu Close

Advertisement

commentary Commentary

Commentary: Why are some people less productive than others when working from home?

The vast majority of those polled said they got more done at home but prolonged isolation that comes from not being around colleagues does take a toll on work, says this researcher.

LANCASTER, England: Has working at home during lockdown made people more productive or not? This has been the subject of some lively debate recently.

Many companies do not routinely measure productivity. A large number will have traditionally assumed that they get the highest output when staff work longer hours or under close supervision, but remote working is clearly causing some to re-evaluate this.

Major firms, for instance professional services group PwC, have been sufficiently impressed to make remote working a permanent option for their staff.

READ: Commentary: Why employers should cover WFH expenses

On the other hand, some business leaders insist that remote working is compromising productivity and is therefore not workable in the long term. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon, for example, has dismissed it as an “aberration that we’re going to correct as soon as possible”. So who is right?

Surveys tend not to be good at measuring productivity objectively. The research partnership Work After Lockdown, on which I’m a co-investigator, has been trying to improve on this.

We have just published the results of an ESRC-funded survey in which we asked 1,085 respondents working from home in the UK about their productivity.

We chose to use standard measure of labour productivity used by economists, output per hour worked, where output refers to the value of the goods or services in question. Using this meant we weren’t just measuring whether people were working longer hours.

We asked our respondents whether they felt that their self-reported productivity was the same, better or worse compared with the pre-lockdown period. From the results, 54 per cent thought they got “a little more” or “much more” done per hour worked than before the lockdown.

(Photo: Unsplash/Charles Deluvio)

Combined with those who reported that their productivity was the same as before lockdown, it meant that almost 90 per cent reported that productivity had been maintained or improved – echoing the results of other UK studies.

READ: Commentary: Our obsession with work emails has worsened during COVID-19

In other words, barely one in 10 people reported that their productivity had gone down during lockdown. So why would working from home have made most people more productive, but some less so?

PRODUCTIVITY AND MENTAL HEALTH

We also questioned our respondents about their mental health, and scored them using the World Health Organization’s WHO-5 index. From plotting the results we can see a very clear pattern, with higher productivity associated with better mental health.

In fact, the mental health scores for the most productive workers in our survey were twice as high as the least productive.

It is not clear from our data whether poor mental health causes or contributes to a decline in productivity or whether being productive helps to boost mental health. It seems reasonable to think that both are probably true.

READ: Commentary: Nobody wants to return to a five-day work week as it was

READ: Commentary: Why do some bosses still want their workers to come back to the office?

To explore this relationship, we looked at people’s ability to adapt to changing circumstances and their capacity to overcome setbacks or interruptions – referred to in the literature as self-regulation.

We might expect people with such abilities to remain focused on a task, and be more productive as a result. Sure enough, this was supported by the data.

Over 90 per cent of our respondents reported that they could concentrate on one activity for a long time; 94 per cent said they were able to use the autonomy afforded them by their employer to re-order work tasks; 85 per cent said they could control their thoughts from distracting them from the task in hand; and 83 per cent said that they had no problem resuming a concentrated style of working after an interruption.

Each of these dimensions of self-regulation were strongly positively correlated with high productivity per hour worked.

READ: Commentary: Are you better off working from home than in the office?

READ: Commentary: Hybrid working may change contractual terms and conditions for employees

It’s worth remembering, of course, that many people working from home during lockdown have been living with mental-health challenges such as isolation, money worries, home-schooling or other health problems.

Clearly if organisations want to ensure that employees are productive working from home, the value of investing in measures to support psychological well-being is very clear.

IS HYBRID WORK THE WAY TO GO?

The social disconnection of working at home over an extended period may well erode people’s mental well-being and productivity in future – perhaps especially among workers who thrive on interacting with colleagues and clients to swap and shape ideas.

The outgoing chief economist of the Bank of England, Andy Haldane, has expressed concerns about this, and 73 per cent of our survey respondents reported that they ideally wanted working patterns that allowed them to vary their place of work to reflect the tasks they were performing.

(Photo: Mimi Thian/ Unsplash)

With this in mind, it has become very fashionable for companies to talk about “hybrid” working lately. 

But it’s an imprecise concept, and if businesses are to give employees clarity around what can be done at home and what needs to happen at a traditional workplace, they will need to decide which jobs truly need to be done at a particular time or location.

Getting this wrong may risk compromising the mental health of employees – for example, if prolonged remote working increases isolation or increases work intensity.

It may also mean that companies never quite manage to deliver the long-term productivity gains they are hoping to secure once lockdown is over.

Stephen Bevan is Head of HR Research Development, Institute for Employment Studies at Lancaster University. This commentary first appeared in The Conversation.


Source: CNA/cr

Advertisement

RECOMMENDED

Advertisement