Thursday, August 24, 2023

The war over work from home: Does remote work really impact success and productivity?

 Forbes

Welcome to Forbes Edge, your insider’s guide to career and entrepreneurial success, exclusively on LinkedIn. If you work from home, you don’t want to skip our top story this week. Forbes spoke with academic researchers, corporate advisers and business executives on what existing data says about remote work’s impact on productivity, creativity and more. Then we’ll tackle some networking tips for those who are introverted, shy or just hate networking. And finally, we’ll take a look at some different résumé formats—and the pros and cons of each.

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Success story of the week: The war over work from home: Does remote work really impact success and productivity?

Many remote and hybrid workers can hear the rumblings of a possible return to in-office work. CEOs of major companies have made headlines in recent months for calling their workers back to the office, eliminating the option for fully remote schedules. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has been unwavering in his distaste for remote work, saying that “it does not work for younger people, it doesn’t work for those who want to hustle, it doesn’t work in terms of spontaneous idea generation.”

Is he right? It’s hard to say. Workplace norms continue to shift, and collaborative software tools are constantly being updated and improved. Productivity is notoriously hard to measure for white-collar workers, and a lot of existing data comes from employee surveys or academic research that studies niche worker categories.

Brian Elliott, who previously led Slack’s Future Forum research consortium and now advises executive teams on flexible work arrangements, says many CEOs still have “executive nostalgia” about a model that worked for them years ago. “There’s still this big CEO echo chamber aspect of it,” he says.

While some data may support the complaints executives have, other research suggests it does the opposite. But it does seem clear that the hybrid arrangement is poised to win out, inexperienced workers are more vulnerable to work-from-home’s downsides, and employees really don’t want to work full-time in the office.

Success Edge: “For whatever reason, we keep making where we work the lightning rod, when how we work is the thing that is in crisis,” says Annie Dean of Atlassian. 

Productivity and culture are two of the main sticking points for many companies when considering flexible schedules. And while there is possibly truth behind the idea of in-office workers being more productive, there are assumptions that have an impact on how those workers are viewed.

UC Davis professor Kimberly Elsbach has long studied “face-time bias,” or the career advantages of people who are physically present in the office. Her 2010 study found that when people are seen in the office, even when nothing is known about the quality of their work, they are perceived as more reliable and dependable, “subjective trait characteristics” that are tied to career advancement. 

As to the question of how much “work culture” can suffer when most workers aren’t in office, software firm Atlassian ran an analysis to see how often remote workers needed to come together to feel more connected. Internal surveys showed that remote employees who got together for in-person gatherings had a 27% increase in how connected they felt; the surveys suggested three times a year was the best frequency for preventing a loss of that connectedness.

“The truth is the flexible way of working is going to stick, but it needs new management practices,” says Harvard Business School professor Raj Choudhury, such as gathering for regular offsites or figuring out how to coordinate attendance so people aren’t Zooming alone in the office. “There’s good hybrid—and there’s terrible hybrid.” 

Read the full story here.

Friday, September 11, 2020

Volvo

 https://twitter.com/mashable/status/1304572180370423809?s=19

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

How can you record the knowledge of your organization?


  • Every organization has significant knowledge that makes them gain a lead in the competition, but how is this recorded within your organization? When this knowledge resides with some employees and is not recorded, it is usually known as “tribal knowledge,” and if this can be a strength, it can be at risk of being forgotten when these personals leave the company.

  • So, how can you simply record the knowledge of your organization? Here are some ideas:
    • Some concepts or things are learned during a project. This experience can be captured by creating a report that discusses the successes and failures of a project, which can then be logged in a knowledge database. Such records will help in completing such projects effectively.





  • Taking Advantage of the Recorded Organizational Knowledge
  • When organizational knowledge is recorded, one should take advantage of this resource, particularly when bringing any changes.

    Implementing quality checklists and work instructions can be met with resistance, but if all concerned personnel know how important this documentation is, implementation will be easier.

    Similarly, the training requirements should be implemented as soon as they have been produced. Systems should be upgraded to incorporate the training for the implementation of work instructions and quality checklists. This incorporation will ensure that when a new person is recruited to the team, he/she will be provided with the most up-to-date training to start the job.

    The knowledge database is an exclusive idea in that it is a input mechanism into the design job, so one needs to update the system of design process to make sure that design engineers are able to take advantage from the lessons which have been incorporated into knowledge database to ensure that no one bypasses learning or improvement that has been recognized and recorded. Personnel should learn to utilize this system so that they may gradually progress in their jobs.