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kmatthews812 | 2 years ago
These articles are very one sided and there is a productive middle ground to be established using productivity management tools. As a manager, it can be difficult to know what your team is working on and who is actually productive, especially in a remote environment. Replace the word "spy" in this article with "hold accountable" and it doesn't sound so bad all of the sudden. But with that visibility, the manager also needs to understand the context in which the data is generated. Whether somebody is productive isn't only a matter of metrics, but also their role, their seniority, and what it is they are expected to do.
As an employee, these tools can benefit you by weeding out teammates who present themselves confidently, but don't actually do much. With a good manager, you should be able to simply do your job and the metrics, in context, take care of themselves.
JoBrad|2 years ago
In my opinion, all these tools do is reward employees that work the way you do, which may improve stats on your metrics, but will encourage group think and diminish creativity.
Happy to be proved wrong, with some facts.
kmatthews812|2 years ago
I agree, if that is the only way you measure productivity. These tools create a more holistic view of what a person does at work and should not be the sole measure of performance.
In reality, what they make visible are the people who do little to nothing for 3+ days. Graphs that shows no work for long stretches make performance conversations much easier. It's tough for a poor worker to argue their way out of that or fake the metrics going forward.
MicrosoftShill|2 years ago
Successful managers figure out how to do their jobs without micromanaging or creating a culture of surveillance. Bad managers do what you're saying.
throwaway2056|2 years ago
- Would you also allow your team mates to know same data about you to them?
- That would be a level playing field.
- Or at least MS tools should 'automatically' report to the User that an Admin did LOOK into their habits.
- This way you will not have intelligent people working in your team. I am saddened that Google does this.
- Are your teammates aware that you can do this?
troad|2 years ago
"If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear."
CuriousSkeptic|2 years ago
Is this a cultural thing? As a Swede I can’t even begin to imagine the scenario where this statement makes any sense
heresie-dabord|2 years ago
> As an employee, these tools can benefit you by weeding out teammates who present themselves confidently, but don't actually do much.
How many employers "weed out" managers who present themselves confidently but don't actually do much?
Not many, in my experience. The management hierachy in an organisation of non-trivial size will be populated by cronyism and Flynn Effect virtuosos.
DANmode|2 years ago
SkyPuncher|2 years ago
Nearly every performance tool I’ve seen only measures outputs. Now, outputs are critical to outcomes - but they’re not the goal themselves.
midasuni|2 years ago
Literally your job. Yes it’s difficult, which is why they pay you rather than automate it. Or get someone on minimum wage to do it.
jdbernard|2 years ago
As another comment points out, the people that use these tools would never give their reports the same data about their own "productivity." Employers try not to even let employees know about this kind of surveillance because it directly undermines any supposed "team culture." They have no place in an equitable relationship. When management uses these kinds of tools they make it clear that they don't care about those being managed. They don't care enough to be honest with them, to be accountable themselves for how they manage. The obvious message these tools send to those under this kind of management is that that management does not see them as respected colleagues and team members, but rather cogs in the machine, "resources" to be exploited.
willcipriano|2 years ago
How do I benefit from this? In my experience the salary of a fired employee is kept by the company not distributed to the remaining employees.
dudul|2 years ago
Even simple metrics like number of PR/code reviews can easily become so useless. They can be good indicators when taken with a grin of salt. But judging someone's productivity from these dashboards is stupid.
I really hope companies/managers who use garbage like that suffer the consequences and the industry learns from it.
waiseristy|2 years ago
If you hire slackers, be prepared to be amazed at how much work they’ll do to bypass your micromanaging. It’s a race to the bottom
BlargMcLarg|2 years ago