Article

Ten “Knock Your Socks Off” Productivity Statistics

Topic: Organizing and Learning How to OrganizeBy Julie GrayPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,587 legacy views

Legacy rating: 4/5 from 1 archived votes

1. “In 2005, a psychiatrist at King’s College in London administered IQ tests to three groups: the first did nothing but perform the IQ test, the second was distracted by e-mail and ringing phones, and the third was stoned on marijuana. Not surprisingly, the first group did better than the other two by an average of 10 points. The e-mailers, on the other hands, did worse than the stoners by an average of 6 points.”

(Tim Ferriss, The Four Hour Work Week http://nymag.com/news/features/24757/)

2. Each day a typical office employee checks email 50 times and uses instant messaging 77 times (RescueTime).

3. 66% of people read email seven days a week and expect to receive a response the same day. (eRoi Email Addiction Survey, Oct. 17, 2006)

4. “In a study released in 2007, a group of Microsoft workers took, on average, 15 minutes to return to serious mental tasks, like writing reports or computer code, after responding to incoming e-mail or instant messages.”

(http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/25/business/25multi.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0)

5. “A diary study of employees at a multinational reported daily interruptions (such as colleagues asking questions) averaged 96 minutes. 58% of the engineers cited interruptions as the reason for leaving tasks incomplete.

Although urgent tasks tended to be completed, the researchers, led by Brigitte J.C. Claessens of Technische Universiteit Eindhoven in the Netherlands, found that less-important tasks were somewhat more likely to be completed than more-important tasks.”

6. Researchers found productivity dropped as much as 40% when subjects tried to do two or more things at once. (University of Michigan)—Entrepreneur

7. Cyber-loafing vs. Emailing: Amount of Internet browsing is significantly and positively related to such upbeat mental states as excited, interested, alert, and active, and inversely related to such negative mental states as distressed, fearful, hostile, and jittery.

Conversely, the amount of e-mailing activity, in distinct contrast, is significantly related to negative mental states but not to upbeat ones. (Cyberloafing at the workplace: gain or drain on work? 2009, Lim and Chen)

8. “Workplace research on productivity started back in the early 1900’s. Five decades of results proved, beyond a doubt, that maximum productivity occurs at no more than 40 hours a week and eight hours a day.”

http://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/why-working-more-than-40-hours-a-week-is-useless.html

9. 62% of workers routinely end the day with work-related neck pain, 44% report strained eyes, 38% complain of hand pain, and 34% report difficulty in sleeping due to work-related stress. Integra Survey, 2000

10. “Writing in the journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, the researchers estimated that lost productivity due to poor sleep cost $3,156 per employee with insomnia and averaged about $2,500 for those with less severe sleep problems.

Across the four companies, sleep-related reductions in productivity cost $54 million a year. This doesn’t include the cost of absenteeism–those with insomnia missed work an extra five days a year compared to good sleepers.”

Article author

About the Author

Website: http://www.profound-impact.com
Julie Gray is a seasoned space organizer, coach, and productivity adviser for exhausted overachievers who are ready to stop the cycle without sacrificing success and find the time and energy to get more out life. Julie's unique expertise is in harmonizing your space, time, AND energy in order to optimize your productivity and drive faster, more impactful results. Her comprehensive system creates more time in your day, and is designed to evolve along with your ever-changing life. Visit profound-impact.com to learn more.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Website

CLEAR YOUR SPACE - CLEAR YOUR MIND I provide clients with tangible tools to assist them in getting organized and reaching their goals. From organizing home/work space to addressing financial, time management, and personal, career, & spiritual goals, my proven system gives you clear, direct guidance.

Related piece

Website

"REMARKABLE TRANSFORMATIONS We are professional home and business organizers. With 20 years of experience in the field of human behavior, I teach clients a new way of thinking and acting that will make their physical space, time, finances and lives flow more smoothly!"

Related piece

Article

We all know that with the price of gas going up, that everything else will soon be jumping in price too. This takes a toll on family vacations, outings for the weekend, rising grocery bills etc. So how can a family have fun and still have money left for all of the bills that are due every month? Sometimes we have to look at things in a simple way in order to re-lea how to enjoy life. We tell kids all of the time to 'use your imagination', but as adults we forget to use ours.

Related piece

Article

"I believe in opening mail once a month, whether it needs it or not." Bob Considine Close your eyes. Imagine coming home from a three week vacation. Notice how big the pile of mail that awaits you is. How do you feel as you contemplate having to deal with it? Feel some resistance? After learning ‘Sasha’s Six Steps for Bringing in the Mail’, I guarantee you’ll feel better about it. Sound good? Okay, then here’s what you need: • A shredder • Three/four tiered horizontal filing tray • Datebook – paper or electronic • Pen and highlighter rnr

Related piece