When a civil servant sits in an office behind a door with a sign, the leader can come in, see what they are doing, hear a phone conversation, and see their workload. However, when an official switches to remote work, this control disappears. The main question arises: how to understand if they are working or just listed on the connection? How to measure the quality of their work if you do not see them physically? The official's home office is not just convenience, but a challenge for the management system that requires new approaches to evaluating labor.
For a long time, the principle of "presence" has been in effect in state service. As long as the employee is on site, they are working. This approach is ineffective in a home office. It is not possible to evaluate an official based on how often they are online, how quickly they respond in a messenger, or how long they keep the cursor on the active screen. These metrics capture activity, not results. Moreover, they create an illusion of work: an employee may "click" on the screen but not solve tasks.
The second risk is a bias towards formal indicators. For example, the number of issued documents or processed applications can easily increase at the expense of quality. In the office, the boss could evaluate this by the content of the papers, but on remote work — only by dry numbers that are easy to "inflating".
The third challenge is the blurring of responsibility. It is more difficult to trace who specifically delays approval or makes a mistake in a home office. When the team is disorganized, it is difficult to separate personal results from common ones.
To evaluate efficiency in a home office, you need to move from presence control to result control. There are several main criteria.
The first is the timeliness of task completion. It is important not just to complete the task, but to meet deadlines. An official must submit reports, prepare documents, respond to requests within the specified deadlines. But here it is important to consider the workload: if the employee receives too many tasks, deadlines may be violated not due to their fault.
The second criterion is the quality of work. It is assessed through the absence of errors, the correctness of documents, the completeness of information. This is especially important in a home office, because the manager does not see drafts but only receives the final result. Therefore, it is important to introduce a system of intermediate control: for example, sending projects for review a day before the deadline.
The third is productivity. How many tasks are completed per unit of time, how many applications are processed, how many questions are resolved. But here you need to be careful: productivity should not be measured only by volume, it is important to consider the complexity of tasks. One complex task may be worth 20 simple ones.
The fourth is communicative efficiency. How quickly and accurately the official responds to questions from citizens and colleagues. In a home office, communication becomes digital: letters, chats, video calls. The quality of communication can be assessed through the speed of response, clarity of formulations, and completeness of information.
The fifth is initiative. An official not only fulfills assignments but also proposes improvements, finds non-standard solutions, takes on tasks that are not part of their direct responsibilities. This criterion is especially valuable in a remote environment where proactivity becomes an important factor of involvement.
The simplest tool is time tracking, accounting for the time spent on tasks. However, as already mentioned, this is more of a supplementary tool that does not reflect quality. It is better to use it in conjunction with other methods.
The second tool is electronic task management systems. In such systems, it is recorded who, what, and when was done. You can track how long a task is in progress, how many times it was returned for revision, and how many approvals it went through. This gives an objective picture of workload and efficiency.
The third is a balanced scorecard (KPI). For each employee, their own KPIs are developed, taking into account the specifics of their work. For example, for an employee working with citizens' applications, key indicators may be: response time, the proportion of resolved applications, quality assessment from surveys.
The fourth is regular feedback from colleagues and citizens. Surveys, questionnaires, analysis of applications. This is a subjective but important source of data.
The fifth is planned quality inspections. The manager can selectively check the documents prepared by remote employees, assessing their compliance with standards.
The main problem is trust. When an official is out of sight, the manager is tempted to tighten control. However, excessive control kills motivation and creates an atmosphere of distrust. Therefore, it is important that the evaluation system is transparent and predictable.
The second problem is uneven workload. On some days, the employee may be overloaded, and on others — free. It is important to evaluate efficiency not for one day, but for a period — a month, a quarter.
The third problem is the lack of clear standards. Many tasks of civil servants are not well formalized, and it is difficult to assess their quality. It is necessary to develop clear criteria for what is considered "good results".
The fourth problem is psychological discomfort. The evaluation of efficiency in a home office may be perceived by employees as an invasion of their personal space. Therefore, it is important to explain the goals and mechanisms of evaluation so that employees see it not as control but as help.
In a home office, the role of the leader changes. Instead of physical control, they should become a mentor and coordinator. Their task is not to watch, but to help the official work effectively. This means regular meetings, discussion of tasks, training, analysis of errors.
It is important to create a culture of feedback, where the employee is not afraid to report problems. If they delay a task, they should have the opportunity to say so in advance, not to try to do "haphazardly".
The leader also needs to be an example of transparency: show their own indicators, discuss their effectiveness, openly talk about difficulties.
The efficiency of a civil servant in a home office is measured not by how many hours they spent in front of the computer, but by the value they have created for society and the state. This requires new thinking from the management system: moving from control to trust, from formal indicators to real results, from punishment to development. A home office does not reduce efficiency if you rebuild the evaluation system. On the contrary, it can improve it by giving officials more freedom and responsibility.
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