Tuesday, July 13, 2010

The Productivity Conundrum

While sipping coffee in the cafeteria of an mid-sized organization I visited some time back, it was interesting to see the number of people out there. I observed the occupancy at different times of the day, excluding the lunch hours of 1200-1500 hrs, when of course most of the employees would be in the cafeteria. Nevertheless, it appeared that in the time period of 0900-1200 hrs and 1500-1800 hrs, at any given point in time, there were roughly around 400 people in the cafeteria and its surrounds. I could not resist the urge to do some back of the envelope calculations and ponder about some productivity issues that would be faced by organizations.

The annual time spent by the employees at the cafeteria would be:
400 persons x 6 hours/day x 250 days = 600000 person hours = 600000 / 8 = 75000 person days

Assuming that around 50% of this time is required for having food and general socializing, it translates into 75000 / 2 = 37500 person days not accounted for.

In other words, 37500 person days / 250 days per year = 150 persons per year were hired in a non-productive fashion. For a company size of about 3000 persons, it means about 5 percent of employees were hired for nothing.

Of course, numbers do not tell the whole story. But then, do they, at least point towards something more meaningful for appropriate management action?

The typical layman’s response could be that employee strength is re-evaluated and adjusted for this non-productive number. However, that would be catering to the symptom and not the cause. The important questions that need to be asked and answered are:

- How best can this free employee time be utilized in areas like training and development, internal projects that address current issues ?
- Why were these persons hired in the first place?
- What assumptions were made earlier that are not relevant now?
- Is it the result of the current organization structure and the processes followed?
- Does it require an assessment of the new business realities and responding to them in a holistic fashion, rather than a simple employee count reduction?

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