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Study Suggests Too Much Collaboration Actually Hurts Productivity
Saturday December 15, 2018. 10:34 PM , from Slashdot
An anonymous reader quotes Inc:
Our attention in the workplace is a precious resource that often falls victim to tools like email, Slack, and so on, which bring a nonstop supply of things to read, things to respond to, things to file, things to loop others in on, things to follow up on, and in general, things to do. This 'always on' dynamic has roots in a desire for increased workplace collaboration and productivity, but as is so often the case, it turns out there is a balance to be struck for optimal results. New research shows that groups who collaborate less often may be better at problem solving.... In a study titled 'How Intermittent Breaks in Interaction Improve Collective Intelligence', the authors use a standardized problem-solving test to measure the contrast between time spent in collaboration mode against the quality and quantity of problem solving results. The group with no interaction predictably had the highest options for solutions, but those solutions were of lower overall quality. The group with high interaction had higher quality solutions, but less variety and a lower likelihood to find the optimal solution. The intermittent collaboration groups found the desirable middle ground to balance out the pros/cons of the no interaction and high interaction groups, leading them to become the most successful problem solvers. The article warns of a 'collaboration drain', suggesting managers pay closer attention to when collaboration is (and isn't) necessary. 'Once upon a time in the land of business, people primarily communicated through conversations, meetings, and internally circulated printed memos. In the absence of email, Internet, cell phones, and CRMs there was a repeating cadence of connection, then disconnection, even while in the office.' 'In this case, 'disconnected' really amounts to uninterrupted -- and able to focus.' Read more of this story at Slashdot.
rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/wXyjdHbcTN4/study-suggests-too-much-collaboration-actually-...
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