Obsessive and unnecessary recording and
reporting at work increases costs and places undue stress on staff. Coupled
with new monitoring systems, workers are being turned into robots, before they
are actually replaced by them.
Two different discussions with members, one
private sector employer and another in an NDPB (quango), highlighted for me the
waste that can develop when employers allow reporting systems to spiral out of
control.
The story was similar in both organisations.
Workers told me that they spend a quarter and a third of their time providing
reports on what they are doing, in different formats, to different parts of the
management structure. The main departments responsible for generating these
reporting demands have grown exponentially, while front line staff are under
huge pressure, coping with increased demands on delivering the service.
(Drakalogia) |
Looking at the annual reports of both
organisations, I can see no qualitative evidence that all this reporting has
had any noticeable impact on their public reporting. It is a regular feature of
Audit Scotland reports that there is insufficient data to judge this and that.
In the public sector this is sometimes used as an excuse for expanding data
collection. It's a point we often make in response to Audit Scotland reports
and something they ought to reflect on.
Taking this one step further, we have John
Harris in the Guardian writing about a novel and new film on the fictional (for
now) Circle Corporation, whose leaders want privacy and autonomy to count for
almost nothing. Workers are under constant monitoring and a system of endless
appraisal by their peers, who feed into a system called Participation Rank – or
PartiRank, for short.
The details of their online and offline lives
are judged according to “an algorithim-generated number” that measures their
activity. “It’s just for fun,” a company high heidyin tells the story’s
principal character. But, of course, it isn’t, it's just one more example of
the passive-aggressive ways of Silicon Valley that appears to be spreading to
Scotland.
Both my examples involve administrative jobs.
However, similar intrusive work monitoring takes place in the huge warehouses
run by online retail giants, and driver deliveries. Sports Direct and Amazon
are well known examples, and there was a story last week that one in ten
workers in another retail warehouse had been so ill that they had to be sent to
A&E.
I have long been irritated at the use of the
phrase 'human capital'. It's as if HR departments feel they need some numbers
to put them on a par with the finance department. Even I had a phone call the
other day from a company wondering why I hadn't taken up their invitation to
'get on board' with the 'science' of HR metrics. After a five minute lecture
from me about the difference between people and robots, they probably regretted
the call! I see one company is trying to sell robots to undertake care tasks. I
am sure our long suffering elderly care service users, just can't wait for this
quality interaction!
The latest buzz highlighted by Harris is 'people
analytics'. Some systems are straightforwardly intrusive: Worksnaps, takes
repeated screenshots of workers’ computers, count their mouse-clicks and take
webcam images. BetterWorks uses a Facebook-like application that depends on
employees publicly posting their supposed workplace goals, and regularly
issuing “cheers” and “nudges” to their colleagues. “In the office of the future,”
says the chief executive of the company responsible, “you will always know what
you are doing and how fast you are doing it". I can't wait!
There are now tracking apps for phones that can
log the whereabouts of staff 24 hours a day. A US-based company called Humanyze
(really!) is working with British businesses including a high street bank and
the consulting firm Deloitte, as well as parts of the NHS. They say:
“Humanyze’s badge can track physical activities in real time, capture
‘nonlinguistic social signals such as interest and excitement’ without
recording actual words, locate wearers and their proximity to other wearers,
and communicate with other electronic devices.”
Harris concludes: "Judging by the way the
idea is sold, the people responsible, for reasons that speak volumes about the
tech world’s endless naivety, they see it as a kind of super-efficient utopia.
Anyone with a grasp of what makes us human should surely recognise it for what
it is: Stasi capitalism, apparently furthering its dominance at a terrifying
speed, with only the faintest murmurs of protest."
There is another way for those employers who
recognise that their workforce consists of diverse talented individuals who
want to do a good job. A study by the ILM has found that more than half (53%)
of employees would consider leaving their job if the structure and culture of
their organisation didn't change. According to the research, lack of employee
empowerment is the root cause of much dissatisfaction in the workplace.
Nearly three-quarters (74%) of staff surveyed
said they wanted more freedom in their roles, but a third (34%) said their work
was overly regulated, and that they were forced to work within overly
controlled structures. 64% of staff surveyed said they struggled to do 'fit in'
with their organisation. Despite two-thirds (66%) of employees wanting to have
a greater say in their everyday working lives, just 24% said they felt their
line managers fostered collaboration.
John Yates, group director at ILM, said overly
authoritarian workplaces should be “a thing of the past, people today want to
work for flexible, fun and friendly organisations. Organisations need to be
flexible, allowing employees to pursue career ambitions and manage conflicting
home life pressures as much as possible, and encourage creativity – injecting
passion and new ideas into the workplace.”
I can think of a growing number of organisations
that need to recognise this and change their systems, behaviours and culture - urgently!
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