One-in-Four Employers Say Their Workers are Less Productive in Summer
Press release from the issuing company
Friday, July 29th, 2011
CareerBuilder's recent survey on employee productivity found that one-in-four employers (26 percent) think workers are less productive in the summer and nearly half (45 percent) think workers at their organization are currently burned out on their jobs. The national survey was conductedMay 19 to June 8, 2011, and included more than 2,600 hiring managers and human resource professionals and nearly 5,300 employees.
Nicer weather, vacation-fever, and kids being out of school led the list of reasons for the perceived summer productivity dip.
Looking at overall productivity trends year-round, 30 percent of employers say workers are more productive today than before the recession began; 12 percent feel workers are less productive than before the recession.
Employers who saw a rise in worker productivity during the recession primarily attribute the increase to the fear of losing a job and the effects of downsized staffs on individual workloads. In addition, 73 percent are seeing the increase sustain today and 14 percent state productivity has increased even more.
"The recession produced consequences for not just those who were laid off, but also for the many employees who were asked to work harder as a result of leaner staffs," saidBrent Rasmussen, president of CareerBuilder North America. "While getting more out of a smaller workforce is a sign of organizational agility during unpredictable times, it's hard to see such yields in productivity holding forever. Headcount will be needed to meet increasing demands."
Worker Burnout
When looking at burnout from the worker's perspective, employers have cause for concern.77 percent of workers say they are sometimesor always burned out in their jobs and 43 percent of workers say their stress levels on the job have increased over the last six months.
The rising stress could be a result of heavier workloads. Nearly half (46 percent) of employees reported an increase in their workloads in the last six months, while only eight percent said their workloads decreased.