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Employees in Asia are spending the most time looking busy at work


Workers in Asia are spending the most time on “performative work” — in other words, focusing on appearing busy more than doing real, productive work. 

That’s according to a new global survey from Salesforce subsidiary Slack and research firm Qualtrics, which pulled data from more than 18,000 desk workers, including executives.

Performative work includes “spending a lot of time in meetings where ‘teams present achievements’ rather than making decisions or addressing issues,” said Derek Laney, Slack’s “technology evangelist” for Asia-Pacific.

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The survey found that employees from India (43%), Japan (37%) and Singapore (36%) reported spending more of their time on such work than the global average (32%). 

Global ranking for percentage of time spent on “performative work”:

  1. India: 43%
  2. Japan: 37%
  3. Singapore: 36%
  4. France: 31%
  5. United Kingdom: 30%
  6. Australia: 29%
  7. Germany: 29%
  8. TIE — United States: 28%
  9. TIE — South Korea: 28%

South Korea, however, tied in last place with the U.S. — workers from both countries reported spending just 28% of their time appearing busy. 

Japan (63%), Singapore (63%) and India (57%) were ranked lowest for percentage of time spent on productive or “real work,” Slack said.

‘Wasted effort’ 

According to Laney, employees’ focus on appearing busy is “likely influenced” by the way leaders are measuring productivity. 

Leaders are most likely to judge productivity based on visible activity instead of focusing on achieving outcomes.

Derek Laney

Technology evangelist for Asia-Pacific, Slack

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Instead of activity metrics, workers surveyed want to be assessed most through key performance indicators; conversations with their managers; and the “hours spent on specific types of work.”

“There is an opportunity for companies to explore new and different ways of working, such as … adopting asynchronous ways of working rather than meetings, to facilitate more effective collaboration at work,” Laney said.

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