Microsoft study finds "infinite workday" is hurting productivity

midian182

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In brief: Remember during and immediately after the lockdowns, when so many companies promised a new era of work-life balance and flexibility? According to new research from Microsoft, the opposite is now true, with most people working an "infinite workday" that lasts more than 12 hours and bleeds into weekends. It's impacting productivity, and while AI could make things better, it could also make them worse.

Microsoft's June 2025 Work Trend Index Special Report warns that more people are now trapped in a seemingly infinite workday. It starts at 6 am, goes on after 8 pm, and doesn't stop when Saturday and Sunday arrive.

The findings, based on trillions of globally aggregated and anonymized Microsoft 365 productivity signals, show that 40% of people who are online at 6 am are reviewing email for the day's priorities.

Much of the most productive hours of the day, between 9-11 am and 1-3 pm, are when half of all meetings are held, wasting people's natural mid-day performance spike. 11 am is also when peak messaging activity is reached, as real-time messages, scheduled meetings, and constant app switching converge.

For many people, work continues late into the evening. Microsoft found that meetings being held after 8 pm are up 16% compared to the previous year. Moreover, the average employee now sends more than 50 messages outside of core business hours, and by 10 pm, nearly a third (29%) of active workers check their inboxes.

The weekend brings little respite. Around 20% of employees are checking their email before noon on Saturday and Sunday, and over 5% are working on emails on Sunday evenings.

The data shows that an average worker receives 117 emails and 153 Teams messages daily. It means that employees using Microsoft 365 are interrupted every 2 minutes by a meeting, email, or notification.

Unsurprisingly, almost half of all employees and more than half of leaders feel their work is chaotic and fragmented.

Microsoft says that AI offers a way out of this endless workday, though it could also accelerate the current system. The company recommends deploying AI and agents to streamline low-value tasks and focusing on the 80/20 rule, where 20% of the work delivers 80% of the outcomes. It also suggests moving from rigid organizational structures to agile, outcome-driven teams augmented by AI.

AI agents are highlighted repeatedly in the report as a solution to these unending workdays. There's no mention of the humans they could put out of a job, of course.

This isn't the first time a study has shown working excessively long hours, especially without stopping, can have a negative impact on productivity. Another report found that the most productive employees operate on a 75/33 work-to-rest ratio: work for 75 minutes then rest for 33 minutes. It also claimed that being in an office, where people stop working for tasks like talking to colleagues or even walking around, can be more productive than working relentlessly at home.

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How about a 24 hour on call work day where you are getting starved, shot at, bombed and are sick with some tropical disease. I feel no empathy for these people at all. If they don't like what they do they can quit and get a cheaper streaming and/or phone plan
 
Wow, just... wow. why tf people allow that to happen? my work hours are well defined and follow regulations, which means, 36 hours of work a week, and after (or before) that it is 'me' time. Employer have no rights to contact me at all, and would be in trouble if they did.
Meetings after 8pm? Best I can do is 5, and point 6 I disconnect. And that only if I took 2 hours lunch break, so I'm in a mood.

Destroying your workers families through badly understood management delusion is just a modern slavery, no matter how they want it to sound like.
 
How about a 24 hour on call work day where you are getting starved, shot at, bombed and are sick with some tropical disease. I feel no empathy for these people at all. If they don't like what they do they can quit and get a cheaper streaming and/or phone plan
And which companies are offering jobs that don't have this problem? I'll wait.
 
How about a 24 hour on call work day where you are getting starved, shot at, bombed and are sick with some tropical disease. I feel no empathy for these people at all. If they don't like what they do they can quit and get a cheaper streaming and/or phone plan
Amen.
 
"It means that employees using Microsoft 365 are interrupted every 2 minutes by a meeting, email, or notification."

Turning off notifications is a solution to this problem, so long as your sysadmin allows it.
 
I felt this way for a long time having jobs with pagers and then later cell phones. Even when working from home you have a tendency to look at your email (usually on the phone), knock out tasks after hours when you're not occupied with some other family/friends activities, and generally keep an eye on business things so you don't wake up Monday morning to a **** show.
 
In North America? Everything outside the military/police… who’s shooting at you?!?

I believe he's talking about the military. I'm pretty sure most jobs in the US don't involve hostile enemy action.
"This problem" <- refers to the problem highlighted in the article. Not the irrelevant "being shot at" problem which has no bearing on the jobs this article is about. Okay, so "the military/police" is an answer to my challenge, but it's a hollow, impractical one. The "if they don't like what they do they can quit" is neither practical nor a solution, and improving these corporate jobs isn't mutually exclusive from improving the lives or safety of people this study isn't about.
 
Yeah, no ****. You don't let people turn off they're gonna burn out and put in the bare minimum REAL fast.

I think we need some studies into how well humans work without water. I'll take my billion in funding plz.
 
Destroying your workers families through badly understood management delusion is just a modern slavery, no matter how they want it to sound like.
This!

I also found a job that suits my needs as much as possible. It has some downsides, but the upsides are IMO worth it. I start my job very early (2.15 AM) and finish at 10.15 AM. So I'm back at home at around 11 AM and then I'm free.
Got to go to bed at 8 in the evening, but these are just weekdays. Weekends off.
 
All this and they are demanding workers return of office. My employer gets WAY more out of me working from home....guilty as charged of working more than 8 hours/day. I like what I do and they pay me very well, I don't mind working extra. I'm not burned-out or suffering, time to toughen-up and stop with the crying or find a different job.
 
The science is there. The studies have been done. Past 6hrs work your a f#*$ing fruit loop.

Our society needs to evolve past this pre 1900s construct of 8+ hours/day work.

Every boss needs to get his head out of his a$$ too!
 
Looking for a job are you? I can't do the looking for you.
I'm not, but it irks me to no end when people like yourself make silly suggestions like "they can quit", as if that is either easy or that there's some obvious place they can work for instead - especially when considering the mass of people involved here. This isn't just one or two jobs in isolation, so they can't all just quit and go somewhere else anyways (there aren't enough job openings to do that).
 
I'm not, but it irks me to no end when people like yourself make silly suggestions like "they can quit", as if that is either easy or that there's some obvious place they can work for instead - especially when considering the mass of people involved here. This isn't just one or two jobs in isolation, so they can't all just quit and go somewhere else anyways (there aren't enough job openings to do that).
They can quit and move the entire family. Suppose you were in Oklahoma's dust bowl? I guess you would stay because you couldn't be bothered to move to somewhere you wouldn't complain, if that place even exists
 
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