In the current remote work era, determining productivity can eat up a lot of meeting time. While some CEOs are fine with a completed checklist, others have discovered their staff will fill their days with trivial tasks.
As we move forward with our work-from-home teams, itβs important to examine where work hours go compared to meeting quarterly targets. Combining the multiple perspectives below should give you a better perspective on how to measure productivity while supporting your remote teammates.Β
βOne CEO has a 10-word remote work policy: βIf you get your work done, thatβs all that matters.β And yet, a report from Qatalag and GitLab shows that remote workers waste an extra 67 minutes online each day doing menial tasks just to prove to their managers and colleagues that theyβre working. Is getting your work done all that matters? Or are there additional ways that remote workers can prove their productivity without doing menial tasks?β
Β
1. Establish Clear Expectations and Trust
βAs a remote tech-hiring expert, I would say that while a CEOβs focus on output over input is commendable, itβs essential to recognize the nuances of remote work. The 67-minute discrepancy highlighted in the Qatalag and GitLab report is a symptom of a larger issue, which is the need for clear expectations, trust, and effective measurement in remote environments.Β
βA βget your work doneβ policy can be a great starting point, but relying solely on output can lead to the exact scenario you mentioned: wasted time spent appearing busy.Β
βWe work with companies that have established clear expectations and deadlines for projects. These expectations go beyond just ticking off tasks and cover things like code quality, communication with teammates, and meeting attendance (even if virtual).Β
βRegular, focused check-insβboth one-on-one and team-basedβcan further build trust and keep everyone aligned.Β
βThe bottom line? When employees feel trusted and empowered to manage their own time, theyβre far less likely to waste it on busy work. Theyβll focus on delivering high-quality results instead of simply logging hours online. This kind of environment will let them take ownership, ultimately leading to a more productive and engaged workforce.β ~Mike Sokirka, Index
Β
2. Focus on Outcomes, Not Output
βEmployers of remote teams need to focus on outcomes, not output. Your remote team members arenβt rated on how many widgets they can crank out every hour. More likely, their outcomes are things like high customer retention rates or reduced errors reported by customers. So why on earth would you track their keystrokes?Β
βSpyware aside, one competency thatβs legitimately critical for remote workers is effective communication. A great way to keep everyone on the same page and communicate updates and roadblocks to team members is with user-friendly project management software.Β
βIβve had great success with Asana, and Iβve seen teams that work well with Wrike and Trello (so there are several good ones out there). Employers, in turn, should communicate effectively with employees via regular one-on-ones, goal-setting, and performance evaluations. That way everyone on a remote, global team knows where they really stand, whether they are sitting in Canada or Cambodia.β ~Susan Snipes, Remote People
Β
3. Achieve Clear Goals and Share Progress
βGetting your work done is crucial, but itβs not the only thing that matters in our remote company. We care about results, not pointless tasks to look busy. Instead of wasting time proving youβre working, focus on achieving clear goals and sharing your progress. Show us the important things you accomplish, not just your daily to-do list.Β
βJoin in team discussions, help solve problems, and keep learning new skills. Remember, being productive isnβt about looking busy all the timeβitβs about making a real difference in your company. Letβs concentrate on what you achieve, not how many hours you spend online.β ~Sharon Koifman, DistantJob
Β
4. Outline Objectives and Micro-Goals
βIf remote workers are wasting that amount of time on average, it sounds like there isnβt a strong system in place to support projects. It would help if you had objectives outlined, deadlines in place, and tasks that should be completed to support the objectives.Β
βTo keep it flexible for remote workers, you can have them work towards a micro-goal each week with an outline of tasks that will help them reach the goal. How they do it shouldnβt matter; it keeps them true to their policy.β ~Adriana Richardson, The Lazy Millennial
Β
5. Deliver Quality Over Busy Work
β67 minutes of alleged βwastedβ time is a drop in the ocean compared to many in-office workers (as we saw with the employee βday in the lifeβ videos that came from Twitter pre-X). We would rather refer to ourselves as result-chasers, not clock-watchers.Β
βOur 100% remote team of wordsmiths, strategists, editors, and account managers operate on a simple principle: deliver quality, and weβll hand you the keys to your own time. Itβs not about proving youβre working; itβs about proving your worth.Β
βWeβve ditched the antiquated notion of βbusy workβ in favor of meaningful metrics. Our writers arenβt judged by hours logged, but by the engagement rates their content generates. Our strategists live and die by the ROI they deliver to clients.Β
βThis isnβt just feel-good management; itβs a battle-tested approach with us regularly outperforming traditional office-based agencies, and Iβd wager those 67 minutes pale in comparison to dining and lounging around the office all day.Β
ββGive us quality, weβll provide autonomyβ is the bedrock of our success. By focusing on performance metrics that actually matter, you can create a culture where productivity isnβt performedβitβs achieved. Itβs not about where you work or how long you work. Itβs about the impact you make.β ~Jason Smit, Contentellect
Β
6. Drive Revenue Growth
βGetting work done is not necessarily correlated with driving business results. If you focus on driving positive outcomes that grow revenue or EBITDA, rather than a long list of tasks, then you will be incredibly valuable and sought-after as high-performing talent.β ~Sean Everett, Evergence
Β
7. Use Project Management Tools Effectively
βWe use ClickUp to assign tasks to remote workers. Each task has a timer and an βAction Listβ attached to the task. The worker starts the timer connected with the task and checks off each action item as they are completed. When they arenβt working on an action item, they pause the timer. It is effective for both us and the worker. They know what they have to do, and we can see if tasks are taking longer than they should. A good SOP helps us create the tasks and action items quickly and lets the worker know exactly what steps they need to take to complete them.β
~Maxine Tubbe, FLEET Car Rental Marketing
Β
8. Shorten Workday for Efficiency
βOne way to tackle this is by reducing the workday from 8 hours to 6. When employees have less time to get their tasks done, they focus more and work more efficiently. A shorter workday motivates employees to be more productive, as they arenβt trying to fill time with busy work.
βFrom my experience, itβs very effective. When I implemented a 6-hour workday, my team initially worried about meeting deadlines. But soon, they started prioritizing better, communicating more, and finding creative solutions. Their productivity increased, and the quality of their work improved because they werenβt burnt out from long hours.
βMaking this change showed me that itβs not about the number of hours worked, but the quality of them. Trust your team to manage their time and focus on outcomes, and youβll organically create a more productive and positive work environment.
βReducing work hours can be a game-changer for you, as it was for me. It pushes employees to use their time wisely and focus on what truly matters. It enhances productivity but also fosters a healthier work-life balance, making everyone happier and more motivated.β ~Grzegorz Robok, Comfort Pass
Β
9. Produce Quality Work and Improve Relationships
βProducing quality work without wasting time posturing to convey that one is working is more important than trying to fill up a business workday with peripheral gestures to justify to oneself that theyβre actually working. Some people engage in these excessive menial tasks to make themselves feel better.
βThis is not any different than working in the physical office, regardless of whether other people are around to assess the βopticsβ of who is working or not. More people waste time in the office engaging in menial tasks, including side chatter and impromptu βDo you have a minute?β conversations, instead of producing results and then moving on with their workday.Β
βGet your work done. Do it well. Instead of focusing on menial tasking, find ways to improve existing work relationships in the process. This will help employees find efficient ways of working remotely by creating healthy outcomes in less time. Mediocre companies with control issues care about micromanaging their employees to see who can best posture without merit. REAL companies care about RESULTS.β ~Sasha Laghonh, Sasha Talks
Β
10. Articulate Accomplishments Clearly
βGetting your work done is obviously important, but itβs not the whole picture.Β
βIn remote work, clearly articulating what youβve accomplished is just as important. You need excellent communication skills to make remote work successful. Itβs not about filling time with menial tasks to prove youβre working. Instead, focus on being able to effectively articulate the work you did.Β
βDonβt be afraid of looking like a βshow-off.β You need to learn how to sell yourself and the value you bring more when youβre working remotely. Itβs a fact of life. Remote work thrives on a blend of productivity and strong communication.Β
βItβs about doing the workβbut also making sure everyone knows about the work youβve done.β ~David Martirosian, Galaxy Growth Media
Β
11. Show Productivity Through Smarter Methods
βWhile getting work done is essential, remote workers can prove their productivity through smarter methods. Clear communication, setting goals, and using collaboration tools effectively can showcase progress. Delivering high-quality work, seeking feedback, and engaging in professional development demonstrate dedication and efficiency, making your contributions visible and valued without the need for menial tasks.β ~Sanjana Thakur, QASource
Β
12. Maintain Responsive and Transparent Communication
βThis is one of the many areas where I would say communication is the key to success as a remote worker. Responsive and transparent two-way conversation between remote workers and their managers and team members is the best way to set managersβ and coworkersβ minds at ease and show them that you are doing your work.Β
βThis starts with responding promptly to messages that are sent to you. That doesnβt need to mean your inbox is always open and you interrupt other work to respond. Instead, my best advice is to set 2-3 established time periods during the day that youβll respond to messagesβmany of our remote workers do this in the morning, just before lunch, and a last time in the afternoon.Β
βAlong with this, make sure you actively contribute to any collaboration youβre asked or invited to contribute to and send regular updates on the status of your projects. The right frequency of these messages will depend on your roleβin many cases, a daily update is the best choice, while for others it could be every other day, or a few brief messages throughout the day, as your work calls for.Β
βIn the end, I do think that getting your work done is all that matters, like the CEO you quoted said. But doing those tasks doesnβt help anyone if your team doesnβt know what youβve been working on. Staying in regular communication with your team will keep you more connected to them and help to show everyone that youβre contributing equally as a remote worker.β ~Rob Boyle, Airswift
Β
13. Focus on Impact and Innovation
βLet me be blunt: that 10-word policy is overly simplistic and potentially harmful. βGetting your work doneβ isnβt all that mattersβitβs about the impact you create, the innovation you bring, and how you contribute to the companyβs growth.Β
βRemote workers shouldnβt need to βproveβ their productivity through busywork. When we went remote, I initially worried about productivity. However I quickly realized that tracking hours or tasks was counterproductive. Instead, we focused on outcomes and impact.Β
βFor instance, our marketing teamβs efforts contributed to our 60% growth in 2023, despite economic challenges. That growth speaks louder than any time log. Weβve implemented a few strategies to showcase productivity without resorting to menial tasks like regular impact reports, cross-functional projects, open communication channels, and results-oriented KPIs.
βThis approach has not only boosted productivity but also improved job satisfaction. When we trust our team to deliver without micromanagement, they often exceed expectations.βΒ ~Emelie Linheden, Younium AB
Β
14. Recognize In-Office Time Wasting
βDo in-office workers spend the entire 8 hours theyβre in the office with their nose to the keyboard, hammering out work at 100% efficiency? No, no they do not. Anyone that has worked in an in-office environment will be able to tell you that you waste significant amounts of time per day doing things that would not be considered work.Β
βTrips to the break room, getting stopped to chat by random coworkers, waiting for the microwave in the lunchroom, getting settled after your commute, hiding in the bathroom, etc., etc. This isnβt even accounting for the sheer drop in focus that heads-down roles have in the office, given that the typical open-office environment can knock you out of any flow state extremely effectively.Β
βLooking at time βwastedβ is counter-productive so long as the volume of work remains satisfactory, and is an excellent way to alienate your employees with over-monitoring and micromanaging. It is symbolic of an old way of company leadership, one that needs to go the way of the dinosaurs for a company to thrive in our current talent environment.β ~Greg Listopad, November Consulting
Β
15. Foster Open Communication and Task-Based Check-Ins
βThere are other ways to prove productivity without doing menial tasks all day. Even I feel unappreciated if I have to prove Iβm working during my work hours. I think instead of asking for menial tasks, managers should focus on open and consistent communication with their team members. They can ask remote workers to maintain an open to-do list, updating it regularly to show progress. One thing they can do is provide side-by-side comparisons or before-and-after images to foster a culture of productivity and trust in remote teams.Β
βAnother effective but not widely-used method is task-based check-ins for remote workers. In task-based check-ins, remote members attend meetings centered around their specific tasks or projects. Managers can discuss progress, obstacles, and next steps with team members, and team members can communicate their challenges and milestones, so theyβre aligned, which ultimately leads to concrete outcomes. In this manner, remote workers will not have to do menial tasks to prove that they are productive and working.β ~Yogesh Kumar, Pinnacle Infotech
Β
16. Try the βTotal Output per Hourβ Formula
βThe real problem behind these menial tasks is micromanagement, which isnβt healthy.
βHonestly, there isnβt much of a workaround other than clearly communicating that the outcomes of your work are what truly matter. Managers should focus on measuring the amount of work completed. There are formulas out there for calculating employee productivity. One common method is the βtotal output per hourβ formula, which looks at how many items of work were completed in a certain number of hours. This can help employers gauge team performance and pinpoint areas that need improvement.
βIn my opinion, the best way to measure productivity is by setting clear goals and outcomes and then measuring performance against these benchmarks. For instance, if you set a goal for each sales team member to make 100 calls per month, establish 20 contacts, and secure 10 sales, you can measure success accordingly. If someone makes 120 calls but only achieves 5 sales, theyβre not meeting the standard. However, if another employee makes only 80 calls but secures 15 sales, theyβre actually exceeding the sales goal. Even though they made fewer calls, they surpassed the sales target. This approach focuses on the end results rather than just activity levels.β ~Kyle Kozlowski, Eco Temp HVAC
Β
17. Use Tools for Tracking Progress
βGetting the job done surely is a huge part of it, but thatβs not all. Transparent communication and measurable outcomes are, we believe, the real deal in proving productivity. Instead of wasting time on menial tasks, remote workers can make use of project-management tools for tracking progress and sharing regular updates. This keeps everybody informed but also shows real contribution rather than activity, driving a results culture rather than an activity culture.β ~Jacob Kalvo, CyberSecurity Expert, Co-Founder & CEO, Live Proxies
Β
18. Be Flexible and Meet Deadlines
βI think that in addition to getting your work done, itβs important to be flexible. Making yourself available to meet deadlines, take phone calls, and collaborate with your co-workers is more important than simply completing menial tasks. As an employee, I take pride in being productive and coming through for my colleagues. Managers donβt need to become helicopter supervisors when they can see consistency and results.β ~Chris B., Minuteman Press International
Β
19. Set Well-Defined Deliverables and Milestones
βI would say this usually happens when there arenβt very well-set deliverables and intermediate milestones people need to achieveβthus employees feel constantly the need to prove they are available, and bosses feel the pressure to keep checking on themβand also when people are working in positions that do require ad-hoc contact and to be available to respond to specific requests (say business development or customer service positions, for instance).Β
βFor the second one, there isnβt that much to do, but for the first, as a leader, defining well your teamβs final outcomes and then creating routines to follow up on this and make sure people have the support they need should be enough to make sure they have the autonomy to do their jobs without having to pretend they are working.Β
βAs an employee, you should make sure you are doing whatβs a priority and then giving enough visibility of that to your leaders. Hopefully, that should be enough to keep people clear of doing menial tasks just to prove theyβre working.β ~Fernanda Camilo Aguiar
Β
20. Establish Transparency and Clear Expectations
βI am certainly much more productive while working remotely. This is, of course, entirely subjective, but I usually clock in at least an hour of overtime on a daily basis. Itβs much easier to maintain focus when you can control the distractions in your surroundings.
βAs for the report results, those 67 minutes werenβt necessarily wastedβthis is attention spent on something else. Managers should ask themselves, βWhy do my employees choose to focus on unproductive tasks?β
βIn my opinion, establishing transparency in a remote setting is a two-way street. Perhaps the employee is overworked or, on the flip side, doesnβt have enough tasks. Whatever the root cause is, proper task delegation, clear expectations, and setting realistic deadlines are the best ways to prevent this from happening.
βMoreover, and to counter the aforementioned report, I wonder how those 67 minutes would measure up if we were to study how much time is wasted on βwatercoolerβ chit-chat at the office. Throughout the day, people tend to take multiple breaks, visit each otherβs desks to socialize, and sometimes extend their lunchtime a tad bit longer.
βThis is a well-known and acceptable part of office culture. Some people would argue that this is good for team morale, which is true. But if we are strictly talking about task productivity, itβs time wasted on things that donβt drive tangible results.
βIf you are a results-driven business, the quality and speed of task completion are some of the most valuable metrics. Knowledge workers, in particular, understand that nobody can be 100% focused on complex tasks for eight hours straight.β ~Bilyana Ivanova
Image: Envato

