No business is 100
percent productive all day, every day.
Not exact matches
A 2016 study by the RAND Corporation found that employees who slept less than six hours per
day were 2.7
percent less
productive — either while at work or due to absenteeism — than peers who slumbered for seven to nine hours per
day.
After linking the medical data with individual worker productivity data, the authors found that participation in the wellness program increased average worker productivity by over 5
percent — roughly equivalent to adding one additional
day of
productive work per month for the average employee.
Ninety - seven
percent of the services we provide every
day focus on prevention to ensure women and their families lead healthy and
productive lives.
A 2009 study by the University of San Diego's Burnham - Moores Center for Real Estate and CB Richard Ellis determined that 54.5
percent of employees in green buildings considered themselves more
productive and took fewer sick
days than they had in their prior workplaces.
Create a weekly calendar with one «peak - performance
day» where 80
percent of your activities are «dollar
productive» — that is, these activities help you close more transactions.