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The Stoddart Review: The workplace advantage

Workplace appraisal

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Raconteur
12 Dec 2016
  • Only one in two employees agree their workplace enables them to be productive

  • Workplace is the second biggest cost in any organisation after salaries

  • It’s time to start measuring the impact of workplace on employee productivity

Attain­ing greater pro­duc­tiv­i­ty is a holy grail that con­tin­ues to elude and excite some com­pa­ny exec­u­tives. Busi­ness lead­ers, econ­o­mists and politi­cians are unit­ed in want­i­ng to ensure firms get the most from their staff at the low­est pos­si­ble cost. But where should they start? The first step is to mea­sure it using a uni­form­ly accept­ed method. Accord­ing to H James Har­ring­ton, the renowned expert on qual­i­ty and per­for­mance improve­ment, if you can­not mea­sure some­thing, you can­not under­stand it. If you can­not under­stand it, you can­not con­trol it. If you can­not con­trol it, you can­not improve it. But then of course, as British econ­o­mist Charles Good­hart iden­ti­fied in the 1970s, spec­i­fy­ing the wrong organ­i­sa­tion­al mea­sures can have neg­a­tive, and even dis­as­trous, con­se­quences.

While econ­o­mists mea­sure it as the vol­ume of out­put per hour worked, many com­pa­nies and indus­tries use their own indices that have more rel­e­vance to their busi­ness. A finan­cial ser­vices firm might use rev­enue per bro­ker while an adver­tis­ing com­pa­ny might focus on the num­ber of accounts, and a back-office ser­vices busi­ness might mea­sure the vol­ume of work com­plet­ed in a cer­tain time. And the chief exec­u­tive will just want to know that what­ev­er is being mea­sured can be linked to future com­pa­ny prof­its.

But what­ev­er mea­sure is used, there is an oppor­tu­ni­ty for the work­place to enable greater work­er pro­duc­tiv­i­ty. For indus­try 4.0, high­er pro­duc­tiv­i­ty comes from bet­ter prob­lem-solv­ing and deci­sion-mak­ing as well as more effec­tive employ­ee and client inter­ac­tions. These mea­sures all point to a shift­ing psy­cho­log­i­cal con­tract between employ­er and employ­ee.

Smarter not more

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, The Stod­dart Review found that the typ­i­cal response has been to car­ry out util­i­sa­tion stud­ies and look to increase work­place occu­pant den­si­ty. These projects may deliv­er increased occu­pant den­si­ty, but they con­fuse spa­tial effi­cien­cy with pro­duc­tiv­i­ty and our inves­ti­ga­tions found that these terms were being far too casu­al­ly trans­posed. ‘Sav­ing real estate costs by increas­ing occu­pa­tion den­si­ty is a false econ­o­my if it results in clut­tered, noisy ‘one-size-fits-all’ envi­ron­ments that frus­trate peo­ple and actu­al­ly hin­der effec­tive work,’ says Brid­get Hardy, strate­gic advi­sor on smart work­ing at the Depart­ment of Work and Pen­sions. ‘The key to increas­ing den­si­ty effec­tive­ly is mobil­i­ty — with the free­dom to choose cou­pled with a choice of envi­ron­ments that suit dif­fer­ent types of work and per­son­al pref­er­ences.’

Research car­ried out for The Stod­dart Review shows that pro­gres­sive firms under­stand that pro­duc­tiv­i­ty is a human out­come, not an organ­i­sa­tion­al one. There is grow­ing aware­ness that the route to pro­duc­tiv­i­ty is no longer just about deliv­er­ing more, but also about deliv­er­ing in a smarter way, through facil­i­tat­ing more effec­tive inter­ac­tions that result in more cre­ative solu­tions, and high­er qual­i­ty tar­gets.

As func­tion heads and indus­try pro­fes­sion­als con­tin­ue to con­flate the effi­cien­cy of space with the pro­duc­tiv­i­ty of employ­ees, it is essen­tial that the board chal­lenges, expects and seeks good answers to a broad range of ques­tions, and that it’s equipped for dis­cus­sions such as these:

- Do our work­places active­ly sup­port employ­ees doing the job we employ them to do?

- Do we under­stand whether dif­fer­ent roles with­in the organ­i­sa­tion have dif­fer­ing work­place needs?

- Do we know whether employ­ees are proud of their work­place?

- Do we know if the work­place is help­ing to cre­ate a strong sense of com­mu­ni­ty?

Office enable employee productivity

 

Beyond open plan

There is now a clear under­stand­ing that the work­place itself can be a bar­ri­er to high­er pro­duc­tiv­i­ty. While some organ­i­sa­tions are still at the stage of imple­ment­ing open-plan solu­tions for cost rea­sons, oth­ers have accept­ed that a large, open-plan office does not nec­es­sar­i­ly result in greater col­lab­o­ra­tion, more effi­cient work­ing or world-beat­ing inno­va­tions. They now realise that open-plan offices can also be noisy, dis­tract­ing, irri­tat­ing and coun­ter­pro­duc­tive.

A wealth of stud­ies past and present has demon­strat­ed this. A 2013 study by the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia found that office work­ers were inter­rupt­ed as often as every three min­utes by dig­i­tal and human dis­trac­tions and that once these dis­trac­tions occurred, it could take as long as 23 min­utes to get back to the task in hand.

The route to pro­duc­tiv­i­ty is no longer just about deliv­er­ing more, but also about deliv­er­ing in a smarter way

A 2016 study from Auck­land Uni­ver­si­ty of Tech­nol­o­gy found that, as work envi­ron­ments became more shared (with ‘hot desk­ing’ at the extreme end of the spec­trum) not only were there increas­es in demands, but co-work­er friend­ships were not improved and per­cep­tions of super­vi­so­ry sup­port decreased. The authors said that ‘dis­trac­tion caused by over­hear­ing irrel­e­vant con­ver­sa­tions is a major issue in open-plan office envi­ron­ments’, and that this dis­trac­tion was neg­a­tive­ly linked with employ­ee per­for­mance and per­cep­tions of the work­place, and with stress.

Stress mat­ters, and not just for rea­sons of com­pas­sion. A 2014 Willis Tow­ers Wat­son Glob­al Ben­e­fits Atti­tudes sur­vey found that lev­els of work­place dis­en­gage­ment increased sig­nif­i­cant­ly when work­ers expe­ri­enced high lev­els of stress. The study, which looked at 22,347 employ­ees across 12 coun­tries includ­ing the UK and US, showed that more than half those employ­ees who claimed to be expe­ri­enc­ing high stress lev­els also report­ed dis­en­gage­ment.

Gallup’s 2013 State of the Glob­al Work­place Report esti­mates the cost of dis­en­gage­ment to the UK’s work­force at £52 bil­lion to £70 bil­lion.

Gallup method­olo­gies use nine key employ­ee engage­ment out­comes: cus­tomer loyalty/engagement; prof­itabil­i­ty; pro­duc­tiv­i­ty; turnover; safe­ty inci­dents; shrink­age; absen­teeism; and qual­i­ty (defects). The Stod­dart Review’s obser­va­tion is that work­place under­pins every sin­gle indi­ca­tor.

The human oppor­tu­ni­ty for UK plc is clear; it’s time to start mea­sur­ing the impact of work­place on employ­ee pro­duc­tiv­i­ty.

 

how-much-does-happiness-affect-productivity

The danger of measuring the wrong thing

The con­se­quences of iden­ti­fy­ing the wrong mea­sure of suc­cess can be dis­as­trous. Take Wells Far­go, for instance, which was recent­ly fined $185 mil­lion. Wells’ employ­ees are incen­tivised to cross-sell prod­ucts to exist­ing cus­tomers and the num­ber of new accounts opened are deemed the lev­el of suc­cess. Due to per­haps a com­bi­na­tion of pres­sure and greed, 5,300 employ­ees opened rough­ly 1.5 mil­lion fake bank accounts with­out cus­tomers’ con­sent, result­ing in the mass accu­mu­la­tion of bogus fees. Before the scan­dal came to light, these employ­ees were get­ting cred­it for open­ing new accounts and meet­ing their sales goals. The busi­ness failed to check whether any of the accounts actu­al­ly had any mon­ey inside. Coca-Cola suf­fered a sim­i­lar mea­sure­ment mis­judg­ment in the 1980s when it com­plete­ly changed its soft-drink for­mu­la based on the results of a series of sip tests. While the testers pre­ferred one sip of the sweet­er for­mu­la, nobody has just one sip of Coke – they drink a whole can. And the com­pa­ny didn’t test whether a whole can of the new for­mu­la was as pop­u­lar as just one sip. It wasn’t. They received over 40,000 com­plaints and had to switch back to the old for­mu­la. In both cas­es, huge expense and effort could have been saved if the com­pa­nies had giv­en more con­sid­er­a­tion to the mea­sure of suc­cess before pro­ceed­ing.

Only one in two employees agree their workplace enables them to be productive

Workplace is the second biggest cost in any organisation after salaries

It’s time to start measuring the impact of workplace on employee productivity

Smarter not more

The Stoddart Review: The workplace advantage

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