24 February 2024

Unsurprising News of the Day

It turns out that return to office mandates don't improve company performance, they just make employees unhappy.

This is a feature, not a bug.  For hard core MBA types, an unhappy workforce is an unalloyed good.

They see employee misery as a metric that indicates that their own overpaid incompetence is working. 

………

Then, bosses began calling their employees back to the office. Many made the argument that the return-to-office (RTO) policies and mandates were better for their companies; workers are more productive at the office, and face-to-face interactions promote collaboration, many suggested. But there's little data to support that argument. Pandemic-era productivity is tricky to interpret, given that the crisis disrupted every aspect of life. Research from before the pandemic generally suggested remote work improves worker performance—though it often included workers who volunteered to WFH, potentially biasing the finding.

For a clearer look at the effect of RTO policies after the pandemic, two business researchers at the University of Pittsburgh examined a sample of firms on the S&P 500 list—137 of which had RTO mandates and 320 that clearly did not between June 2019 and January 2023. The researchers collected publicly available data on each company, including financial data and employee reviews. They then looked at what factors were linked to whether a firm implemented an RTO policy—such as the company's size, financial constraints, and CEO characteristics—as well as the consequences of the RTO mandates—employee satisfaction and financial metrics of the firms.

Overall, the analysis, released as a pre-print, found that RTO mandates did not improve a firm's financial metrics, but they did decrease employee satisfaction.

Managers are not motivated by productivity or efficiency.  Instead, they feel that, too quote Blazing Saddles, "Gotta protect our phony baloney jobs."

Harrumph.

1 comments :

Anonymous said...

It is a way of doing layoffs without looking like you’re doing layoffs. That is all it ever is.

Post a Comment