|
- Welcome to the ‘infinite workday’ of 8 p. m. meetings and . . .
The typical worker also receives 117 emails per day and, by 10 p m , almost one-third of employees are back in their inboxes, “pointing to a steady rise in after-hours activity,” Microsoft noted
- Meetings After 8 p. m. Are On the Rise, Microsoft Study Finds
Meetings starting after 8 p m are up 16% compared to a year ago, and at 10 p m almost a third of active workers are still monitoring their inboxes, according to research from Microsoft Bloomberg: The company's annual work trends study, which is based on aggregated and anonymized data from Microso
- The No. 1 workplace distraction that kills productivity . . .
But new research from Microsoft shows how out of hand our work calendars have gotten: Since February 2020, people are in 3 times more Microsoft Teams meetings and calls per week at work, a
- Stop Zooming and Take a Break: New Brain Research from . . .
New brain study by Microsoft Microsoft’s Human Factors Engineering group recently conducted a study that clearly shows the alarming effects that too many back-to-back virtual meetings have on our brains
- It’s True. Everyone Is Multitasking in Video Meetings | WIRED
A Microsoft study finds just how often remote workers multitask during videoconferences—especially when the group is large and the meeting runs long
- Back-to-back meetings really are stressful - they increase . . .
New research finds the stress you feel during back-to-back meetings is all in your head Microsoft's Human Factors Lab studied electrical activity participants' brains as they endured one
- Driven to distraction: Microsoft study reveals meeting overload
The study, which analyzed trillions of Microsoft 365 productivity signals and data from the LinkedIn Economic Graph, showed the crushing weight of the modern work day: 57% of the average employee’s time is spent in meetings, email, and chat; 43% is spent creating documents, spreadsheets, and presentations
|
|
|