If you think instant messaging and Facebook are time-wasting interruptions for slackers who’ll do anything rather than work, think again.
A new study from no less than the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and powerhouse IBM finds that workers who maintain online connections to their bosses produce more than those who don’t.
The surprise finding: Not only were people who frequently communicated online with their manager more productive, but those who avoided their managers online were much less productive.
The researchers (two of them from MIT’s Sloan School of Management) analyzed a wide range of electronic communication channels, including e-mail, buddy lists and social networking activity of 2,600 workers over 12 months to come up with their conclusions.
Employees who maintained constant electronic communications averaged an increase in revenue of $588 per month over the average; the luddites who didn’t produced $98 per month less than the average.
The researchers concluded that the under-performers probably felt pulled in too many directions with no clear leadership or direction.
As the modern workforce becomes more geographically dispersed it’s become a challenge for workers and managers to stay connected and know each other’s strengths and weaknesses.
Using electronic tools to forge stronger bonds and communicate tasks, objectives and feedback seems to be a key way for companies to keep everyone connected and productive.
To read the details of the MIT/IBM study, visit here.
IM the boss, be more productive
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