59% of Workers Feel Monitoring Hurts Trust
Research finding that 59% of workers believe monitoring hurts trust between employees and management. Highlights the importance of transparent, respectful time tracking implementations that balance accountability with privacy.
Last updated: 2026-03-20 03:48
Overview
Research shows that 59% of employees feel that workplace monitoring, including time tracking with surveillance features, damages trust between workers and management. This finding emphasizes the critical importance of implementing time tracking respectfully.
Key Findings
- 59% of workers believe monitoring hurts trust
- Surveillance-style monitoring particularly damaging
- Transparency about monitoring critical for acceptance
- Purpose and communication matter significantly
- Privacy-respecting approaches build rather than break trust
- Employee input in implementation improves outcomes
- Balance between accountability and autonomy essential
Impact on Organizations
Damaged trust leads to reduced employee engagement, higher turnover, decreased productivity, resistance to time tracking systems, and overall negative workplace culture. The benefits of monitoring can be lost if trust is destroyed.
Building Trust
Trust-building approaches include transparent communication about what's tracked and why, privacy-focused monitoring (no screenshots or keystroke logging), employee involvement in policy creation, focus on productivity support rather than surveillance, and clear data usage policies.
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