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Economy

Outputs To Outcomes: Why It’s Time To Stop Measuring Productivity

Initially used to measure the link between exploited resources and final results in the industrial production process, the concept of productivity is the most widely used economic indicator. It is also sorely out-of-date.

photo from above of a woman on the floor working on her computer

Working from home

Alexis Gaches

Two hundred and fifty years after the beginning of industrialization, a new revolution is on: the digital one. If the automation of almost all production has led workers to turn to knowledge-based jobs, the concept of productivity is still anchored in management culture. But it is time to question the relevance of an evaluation of intellectual work through the prism of productivity.

Let’s take the example of a writer able to write two mediocre books in the same amount of time they would need to write one very good book. Two books means twice as much output, so a higher productivity rate. But since one good book sells better, their publisher will likely prefer quality over quantity. In this case, applying a productionist approach would be counterproductive.

Better to satisfy a client than to time work

The same logic applies on the scale of services and the digital economy. A digital development agency working to improve an e-commerce app for one of its clients could decide to measure the team’s performances on the basis of purely quantitative parameters.

If the team is rewarded for the delivery speed and the number of modifications made on the program, it will be encouraged to deliver multiple minor features that do not improve the buying experience of the final user and do not make the product more attractive. The team could have invested in more long-term, in-depth creative work — riskier but more satisfying for the client.

Outcomes at the core of management thinking

If productivity has always been reliable to measure the results of the use of technological and financial resources, it has never been a good management tool to evaluate human impact. What measure should then be used instead ?

Health and happiness are necessary ingredients to produce quality work and carry out objectives

This question can be answered by moving from a model based on efficiency to another model, centered around efficacy, differentiating between the notion of outputs (immediately quantifiable results) and outcomes (bigger scale results that can be observed over time on the basis of predefined objectives).

For example: Instead of ordering five articles a month from a marketing manager, they should be asked to contribute to the increase of web traffic, no matter the number of articles published, and assess their work based on the result depending on this objective. One of the advantages of this approach lives in its capacity to stimulate creativity and innovation. If we impose short-term quantitative results instead of setting impactful strategic objectives in the long run, we significantly reduce creative possibilities.

It is important to establish with coworkers a relationship that puts the individual at the center

Alex Kotliarskyi

Looking back on the work done

This management method is a better fit for the new flexible and decentralized work mode. It allows the creation of fluid, adaptable processes, a more strategic management of resources, a responsibilization of collaborators that makes for transversal team dynamics.

In this context, measuring improvement means analyzing growth rates. Are there fewer service breakdowns over time ? Is the rate of new client acquisition staying stable or improving each year ? If these indicators improve, it means there is gradual progress. Quality-wise, it is recommended to plan retrospectives to reflect on the work done, learn lessons from it and apply them in the future.

Productionist approach does not work anymore

Health and happiness are not variables usually included in improving productivity, but they are necessary ingredients to produce quality work and carry out objectives. It is, for example, possible to use as indicators the analysis of the number of planned days off in comparison to the number of those unplanned, or the amount of overtime.

It is important to establish with coworkers a relationship that puts the individual at the center, rather than the project, because it is on this foundation that we will be able to build a work environment that favors quality. This paradigm should have been changed 20 years ago, at the dawn of the digital revolution, but it is not too late to make the change today.

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Society

Should Christians Be Scared Of Horror Movies?

Horror films have a complicated and rich history with christian themes and influences, but how healthy is it for audiences watching?

Should Christians Be Scared Of Horror Movies?

"The Nun II" was released on Sept. 2023.

Joseph Holmes

“The Nun II” has little to show for itself except for its repetitive jump scares — but could it also be a danger to your soul?

Christians have a complicated relationship with the horror genre. On the one hand, horror movies are one of the few types of Hollywood films that unapologetically treat Christianity (particularly Catholicism) as good.

“The Exorcist” remains one of the most successful and acclaimed movies of all time. More recently, “The Conjuring” franchise — about a wholesome husband and wife duo who fight demons for the Catholic Church in the 1970s and related spinoffs about the monsters they’ve fought — has more reverent references to Jesus than almost any movie I can think of in recent memory (even more than many faith-based films).

The Catholic film critic Deacon Steven Greydanus once mentioned that one of the few places where you can find substantial positive Catholic representation was inhorror films.

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