According to a groundbreaking upcoming report 1E has commissioned with Wakefield Research, 89% of IT managers say their current or former companies use productivity surveillance tech monitor employees, yet 73% of IT managers are uncomfortable instructing their staff to deploy it. This puts IT departments in a precarious situation as such spying becomes more common. Their misgivings are well founded. Data suggests that deploying employee surveillance software is ineffective and counterproductive, causing employees discontent, stress, and distrust in leadership. 

In Part 1 of our webinar series on employee surveillance, 1E’s Hannah Lenane will be joined by Wakefield Senior Partner Nathan Richter to discuss the report and how organizations can expect these trends to impact their business in the long and short term. 

Register for this webinar to find out what these fresh findings mean for you:  

  • Scaring away talent: more than half of IT workers would turn down an otherwise desirable IT position if they knew the company used employee productivity surveillance technology 
  • Employee wellbeing: this technology’s fallout can cause profound harm to the well-being of employees, doubts regarding the accuracy of the data produced, talent management problems, and an erosion of trust in leadership and company loyalty 
  • Lack of transparency: IT staff are more comfortable with the tech when the company is transparent about it, yet many companies hide the truth  
  • Ethics above job security: nearly 3 in 4 IT workers (73%) say they’d inform other employees if their company was using productivity surveillance technology without telling employees, even if it was against policy