FieldSton-ie_Filler t1_je32deu wrote
Reply to comment by JadeitePenguin1 in I Would Love to Have Enough Time and Money to Go to an Office to Work All Day - Perhaps Steven Rattner and the executives complaining to him about their remote employees could lend me a hand (or $50,000 more a year). by speckz
Nah because it's been a busy day and you're delusional.
I'll take some of that and plop my ass on the couch...
JadeitePenguin1 t1_je3f42w wrote
Nope you have nothing that's why.
Specialist_Honey_629 t1_je4q4lc wrote
except Australia has a few studies on this. That completely contradict your statement. Centre for Transformative Work Design has a few. Have a good day daddy
JadeitePenguin1 t1_je55nkl wrote
And yet no links to said studies...
If you can't back up your claims don't make them.
Specialist_Honey_629 t1_je5oohe wrote
>Centre for Transformative Work Design
Also pointing out there is another study out of china that I have posted a link to. Again making your comments meritless
JadeitePenguin1 t1_je5rw23 wrote
Also you mean your link that doesn't work...
Specialist_Honey_629 t1_je5vmcl wrote
yea doesn't work for you conveniently https://www.researchgate.net/publication/256051553_Does_Working_from_Home_Work_Evidence_from_a_Chinese_Experiment
JadeitePenguin1 t1_je66o0e wrote
Yeah you 100% didn't click the link...it says error 404, the site it's on works meaning what you linked isn't right....
Specialist_Honey_629 t1_je6775e wrote
my man do you not know how to use the internet?
Abstract
A rising share of employees now regularly engage in working from home (WFH), but there are concerns this can lead to “shirking from home.” We report the results of a WFH experiment at Ctrip, a 16,000-employee, NASDAQ-listed Chinese travel agency. Call center employees who volunteered to WFH were randomly assigned either to work from home or in the office for nine months. Home working led to a 13% performance increase, of which 9% was from working more minutes per shift (fewer breaks and sick days) and 4% from more calls per minute (attributed to a quieter and more convenient working environment). Home workers also reported improved work satisfaction, and their attrition rate halved, but their promotion rate conditional on performance fell. Due to the success of the experiment, Ctrip rolled out the option to WFH to the whole firm and allowed the experimental employees to reselect between the home and office. Interestingly, over half of them switched, which led to the gains from WFH almost doubling to 22%. This highlights the benefits of learning and selection effects when adopting modern management practices like WFH. JEL Codes: D24, L23, L84, M11, M54, O31.
Working-Ad4480 t1_je684rv wrote
Works for me?
Specialist_Honey_629 t1_je5nqia wrote
my dude I told you right where to go to find it. Do you know how to google? if so google Centre for Transformative work design. Put on those big boy pants and do some work your self.
JadeitePenguin1 t1_je5q9ev wrote
If you can't link you're wrong!
I'm not going to look up your proof that's your job!
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