Microsoft study says working from home stifles creativity and teamwork

Microsoft study says working from home stifles creativity and teamwork
Microsoft study says working from home stifles creativity and teamwork

Working from home reduces creativity, communication and teamwork, a new study from researchers at Microsoft has revealed.

Researchers at the Redmond, Washington-based tech giant looked at data from more than 61,000 employees at the company from December 2019, prior to lockdown, to June 2020. 

They found working from home (WFH) made workers 'more siloed in how they communicate' and forced them to engage in fewer real-time conversations. 

It also made it harder for employees across different departments to acquire and share new information, which could have implications for a company's 'productivity and innovation'. 

On the other hand, working from home meant employees were spending fewer hours in meetings – often criticised as overlong and a waste of time.  

Interestingly, remote work also increased the volume of emails and instant messages sent, as well as the average number of hours worked in a week, suggesting that WFH has actually made employees work harder. 

Researchers didn't reveal the possible reason for this, but it could be that remote working rules have made it possible for employees to return to their workstations after hours if work-related thoughts enter their minds.  

The end of working from home? With the end of lockdowns, companies like Microsoft are now debating the  long-term impact of large-scale remote work, which may have negative mental health impacts by making employees 'more siloed in how they communicate'

MICROSOFT INVITES EMPLOYEES BACK TO THE OFFICE - BUT 73% WANT FLEXIBILITY  

In March, Microsoft said it will start to bring staff back to its Washington headquarters - after its own survey found 73 per cent of workers want flexible working conditions to continue.

In a post on the company's corporate blog, the tech giant detailed its plans to start to reopen facilities it largely shuttered during the coronavirus pandemic.

Executive vice president Kurt DelBene said Microsoft has been monitoring local health data and decided it can bring more employees back to its Redmond campus.

DelBene said workers will have the choice to return to headquarters, continue working remotely or do a combination of both.

The company's Work Trend Index, released that month, found that 73 per cent want flexible working conditions to continue.   

Read more: Microsoft invites workers back to the office 

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The new research was led by David Holtz, an assistant professor at the Haas School of Business, the University of California, Berkeley. 

Microsoft revealed in March that it was giving its employees the opportunity to return to its offices after more than a year of shielding from Covid-19.

Going forward, the tech giant will promote a 'hybrid' model where employees can choose what's best for them, according to its CEO, Satya Nadella.  

'Measuring the causal effects of remote work has historically been difficult, because only certain types of workers were allowed to work away from the office,' Professor Holtz said.

'That changed during the pandemic, when almost everyone who could work from home was required to do so. 

'The work-from-home mandate created a unique opportunity to identify the effects of company-wide remote work on how information workers communicate and collaborate.' 

Professor Holtz and colleagues used data from before and after Microsoft imposed a company-wide work-from-home mandate in response to Covid.   

The analysis was based on anonymised data describing the emails, instant messages, calls, meetings and working hours of the majority of Microsoft's US employees. 

Data also included employees' roles, managerial status, business group, length of tenure at the company, and what share of their co-workers were remote prior to the pandemic. 

Prior to its work-from-home mandate, 18 per cent of Microsoft employees were already working remotely. 

For the study, researchers separated changes in behaviour caused by remote work specifically, rather than the upheaval of the pandemic itself. 

For example, workers were having to juggle work with caring for children or vulnerable relatives at home, and coping with general stress and anxiety.   

Overall, the authors found that WFH caused a shift away from real-time communication like phone calls and meetings, towards less immediate communication like emails and instant messages. 

Specifically looking at who workers were communicating with, remote working reduced

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