At the outset of pandemic office closures, 98 Buck Social, a social media marketing company based in Florida, installed an application on all employee computers that randomly captures screenshots of desktop activity every 10 minutes. Amazon and Facebook have shared that they’re tracking badge swipes to ensure that employees ordered to return to the office regularly report to work. JPMorgan Chase developed its own software to record how long employees spend on Zoom calls, emails, and spreadsheets, among other activities.
Surveilling Employees Erodes Trust — and Puts Managers in a Bind
There’s a growing movement to track employee productivity through increasingly sophisticated technology, such as desktop surveillance, biometric smart badges, location tracking, or desk heat sensors. While this can be intrusive, it also presents opportunities for gaining profound insights into employee behavior, such as which applications employees use most frequently or whether employees are at risk of overworking based on their work patterns and productivity. While the ultimate decision to use these technologies typically comes from upper management, implementation and utilization of such systems typically falls on supervisors. New research suggests that when information obtained through monitoring is used for control purposes (e.g., performance review), employees were more likely to engage in counterproductive behavior, such as time thievery, inattentiveness, cyberloafing, or tardiness. However, when the information obtained through monitoring was used for feedback, employees continued to trust and maintain positive relationships with their supervisors and performed better in their jobs.