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Call centre employee's reasons for variation in objective productivity during a cognitive ergonomics intervention

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conference contribution
posted on 2021-05-25, 08:50 authored by Silvia Ahmed, Michael FrayMichael Fray, Laurence Clift
Call centre employees experience of mental game playing during work breaks were recorded in this study. The qualitative study involving two focus group discussions at different call centres, with 6 employees in one focus group and 9 in the second, stated employee's reasons for variations in the key performance metric by which they were being evaluated. In this case the key performance metric was the average speed of answer. In a previous study, where the mental games were introduced as an intervention during work breaks, the participants were asked to provide feedback on variations in productivity during a 4-week intervention study. Volunteer sampling was utilized, and the information was categorized into codes. Similar codes were grouped into themes. It was found that players are efficient in the middle of the week either because daily routine settles middle of the week or because employees try to average their metrics related to time. They also thought that productivity increased towards the end of the intervention because of games being accepted in the routine by that time, because the focus shifted from fun to work towards the end or because the employees knew they were being evaluated. According to participants, the non-players were more efficient than the players because games served as a bad distraction for the players and that players were considering games as something to do rather than an actual break. As a conclusion, it felt important to improve on the timings and frequency of the games played during work before it can be considered an effective intervention.

History

School

  • Design and Creative Arts

Department

  • Design

Published in

ECCE 2021: European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics 2021

Source

European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics 2021 (ECCE 2021)

Publisher

ACM

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© 2021 Association for Computing Machinery

Publisher statement

© ACM 2021. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive Version of Record was published in European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics 2021 (ECCE 2021), https://doi.org/10.1145/3452853.3452860

Publication date

2021-04-26

Copyright date

2021

ISBN

9781450387576

Book series

ACM International Conference Proceeding Series

Language

  • en

Editor(s)

Patrizia Marti; Oronzo Parlangeli; Annamaria Recupero

Location

Siena Italy

Event dates

April 26–29, 2021

Depositor

Dr Michael Fray. Deposit date: 24 May 2021

Article number

1

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