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Tag: Harvard Business Review

  • Microsoft: Too Much Collaboration Is Bad for Employee Happiness

    Microsoft: Too Much Collaboration Is Bad for Employee Happiness

    Two Microsoft executives have released the results of their research into what makes employees happy, and the results are surprising.

    Companies large and small have been trying to determine what contributes to happy, productive employees. Microsoft’s Dawn Klinghoffer and Elizabeth McCune set out to answer using an entirely different methodology than in past years and published their findings in the Harvard Business Review.

    Klinghoffer serves as Microsoft’s Head of People Analytics, while McCune serves as Director of Employee Listening Systems. Together, the two women believed there had to be a better way of gauging employee satisfaction than the lengthy, in-depth surveys normally used. Even when employee engagement appeared to be high in the surveys, a deeper dive into the results showed that many employees were still struggling.

    Klinghoffer and McCune opted for more focused and shorter surveys spaced six months apart. The pair also relied on numerous other data points rather than relying on the surveys alone. The results shed light on some of the biggest factors that contributed to employee happiness.

    Company culture appeared to play a big role:

    Thriving employees talked about a collaborative environment and teamwork with colleagues, an inclusive culture with autonomy and flexibility, and well-being support. These comments reference examples such as being able to have honest, non-judgmental conversations on difficult topics, with a focus on finding solutions.

    Interestingly, unhappy employees talked about company culture too, but in a completely different way:

    Employees who weren’t thriving talked about experiencing siloes, bureaucracy, and a lack of collaboration. In these comments we hear a lack of agency and a sense for being a cog in a machine. In other words, the opposite of being empowered and energized to do meaningful work.

    One of the biggest surprises came when analyzing work-life balance:

    By combining sentiment data with de-identified calendar and email metadata, we found that those with the best of both worlds had five fewer hours in their workweek span, five fewer collaboration hours, three more focus hours, and 17 fewer employees in their internal network size. This reinforces what we know from earlier work-life balance research and network size analysis, which showed us that increased collaboration does have a negative impact on employees’ perception of work-life balance. It also confirms that collaboration is not inherently bad — for many employees, those times of close teamwork and striving toward a common goal can fuel thriving. However, it is important to be mindful of how intense collaboration can impact work-life balance, and leaders and employees alike should guard against that intensity becoming 24/7.

    Klinghoffer and McCune’s full analysis is well worth a read and upends what many companies would consider established facts. Microsoft has been earning a reputation for putting its employees first, and the effort that went into this study is another testament to the company’s efforts.

  • Satya Nadella: Companies Shouldn’t Be Dogmatic About In-Office vs Remote

    Satya Nadella: Companies Shouldn’t Be Dogmatic About In-Office vs Remote

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has spoken again about the ongoing workplace transformation, saying companies should not be dogmatic.

    In an interview with Harvard Business Review, Nadella said there are two factors at work in the workplace.

    One is the trend around hybrid work, which is a result of the changed expectations of everyone around the flexibility that they want to exercise in when, where, and how they work.

    And then the second mega trend is what Ryan Roslansky, who is the CEO of LinkedIn, termed, which I like, which is the great reshuffle. Not only are people talking about when, where, and how they work, but also why they work.

    Nadella also talked about how 70% of people want flexibility, while 70% also want a human connection. Similarly, 50% of people want to be able to continue working from home, saying they can better focus while doing so, while 50% want to work in the office because they can better focus there.

    As a result, Nadella emphasizes the importance of companies being flexible and letting the transformation continue to shake out.

    So the real thing I would say is right now, it’s probably best not to be overly dogmatic. Because I don’t think we have settled on the new norms.

    These norms have to settle so that then we can have real causal relations that settle. And then we can understand what are even the broad contours of productivity flexibility.

    The full interview in the Harvard Business Review is well worth a read, and has insights from one of the most important business leaders in the world.

  • Want Your Tweets To Matter? Be Funny or Informative

    Not all tweets are created equal – anyone who has spent even a small amount of time on Twitter can attest to that. I’m much less likely to care that you checked-in to the Rib Shack on Foursqaure than let’s say, a witty little 140-character quip about something Rick Santorum just said. But I’m stingy with who I follow, as I don’t want my Twitter feed to be infested with tweets that I barely gloss over in a desperate attempt to find something that even remotely interests me.

    And it’s a good thing that I’m so selective. According to a study by the Harvard Business Review, not a whole lot of what is out there is even worth my time.

    They set up a website, populated by over 43,000 tweets. Then, they asked 1,443 Twitter users to judge the quality of said tweets. What they found was that only 36% of all tweets are “worth reading.”

    Furthermore, only 39% were deemed “just OK.” The remaining percentage falls to tweets that simply weren’t worth reading (25%).

    So barely over a third of tweets are really worth anyone’s attention. People are busy, and there’s no need to waste their time with boring tweets. I get that.

    But when it comes to what kind of tweets are considered worth it versus not worth it, there are some surprises. For instance, self-promotion tweets (HEY!! We’re performing on April 30th in Phoenix, etc) were among the more popular tweets. Also, “conversation” tweets where a user retweets another user’s tweet, but with added commentary. I tend to like these types of tweets.

    Unsurprisingly, the kind of tweets that respondents found most worth reading were random thoughts – you know, funny or interesting tidbits that seem to have appeared out of nowhere in someone’s brain. I can agree, these are my favorite kinds of tweets. On the flip side, tweets like “Good morning, world” (presence maintenance) were the least popular. 45% said those aren’t worth reading.

    Sometimes, Twitter’s not as easy as it looks. And some people really don’t know how to tap its great potential. Going forward, just remember that nobody really wants to read about what you’re doing at this exact moment. Unless, of course, you’re a celebrity.

    [Via Washington Post]