Compelled to digitally monitor employee productivity, companies are investing in sophisticated behavior tracking tools at a breathtaking pace, giving little thought to how employees feel about those practices
Darden Professor's research focuses on the future of work and the integration of novel technologies into the workplace, notes that the work-from-home reality has only accelerated the adoption of behavior tracking tools
Image: Shutterstock
Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, which forced many organizations to make a shift to remote work, artificial intelligence (AI) systems designed to track employee behavior and productivity were seeing a significant uptick in use.
A recent report by market research firm Gartner lists employee monitoring as one of the top technology trends shaping the modern global workplace. According to Gartner, companies are increasingly embracing AI-enabled tools to analyze worker behavior in the same way they deploy AI to track and understand customer behavior.
Darden Professor Roshni Raveendhran, whose research focuses on the future of work and the integration of novel technologies into the workplace, notes that the work-from-home reality has only accelerated the adoption of behavior tracking tools. When the pandemic began in 2020, 30 percent of large employers adopted new employee-tracking technologies. A year later, that number jumped to 60 percent.
Compelled to digitally monitor employee productivity, companies are investing in sophisticated behavior tracking tools at a breathtaking pace, giving little thought to how employees feel about those practices. As Raveendhran puts it, “Companies are adopting novel technologies to make their processes more efficient and to improve their decision-making, but they often forget about their most important stakeholder group—their employees. So, the people get lost in the mix.”
[This article has been reproduced with permission from University Of Virginia's Darden School Of Business. This piece originally appeared on Darden Ideas to Action.]