this post was submitted on 15 Aug 2023
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Asklemmy
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I know someone who works in IT at a place where they found that keystrokes rose 40% in office and significantly more work was completed as measured by story points. Keystrokes aren’t a great way to measure productivity, but it’s very suspicious that people somehow had to type less when they have to type to talk to anyone and often don’t have to in office.
It’s not perfectly scientific, but businesses pretty much never have scientific data to work with and the evidence they have says people overall are more productive in office.
It really doesn't, quite the opposite. But a bunch of people seem to think it does for some reason.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/glebtsipursky/2022/11/03/workers-are-less-productive-working-remotely-at-least-thats-what-their-bosses-think/?sh=24a80c5e286a
Thanks for the article, it's an interesting one and it's one of the few I've seen that describes actual research on WFH productivity