City
Epaper

Most organised people key to productivity, feel 9 in 10 Indian professionals: Report

By IANS | Updated: March 4, 2025 14:16 IST

Bengaluru, March 4 At least 94 per cent of Indian knowledge workers believe that most organised individuals are ...

Open in App

Bengaluru, March 4 At least 94 per cent of Indian knowledge workers believe that most organised individuals are also the most productive, highlighting the strong connection between order and output, according to a report on Tuesday.

A significant 56 per cent of Indian knowledge workers report having to take on extra work when collaborating with disorganised colleagues.

This highlights the ripple effect of disorganisation, where the burden of inefficiency falls on others, potentially leading to increased workloads and decreased morale, according to the survey commissioned by Atlassian and conducted by Wakefield Research.

Furthermore, 33 per cent of professionals have had to redo work due to a disorganized teammate, underscoring the direct cost of disorganization in terms of wasted time and resources.

Notably, 82 per cent of Indian participants consider themselves more organised than their colleagues, suggesting a high level of self-perceived organisational competence in the workforce.

While the ideal of perfect organisation is often touted, the survey also revealed a more nuanced reality in India.

Many professionals have developed their own unique systems for managing tasks, even if those systems appear unconventional.

In fact, chaos correlates with age as 71 per cent of Gen Z and 72 per cent of millennials in India agree their organisation system looks chaotic, but it works perfectly for them.

The survey reveals that 46 per cent of Indian workers use two separate to-do lists to track tasks across work and their personal lives, while 27 per cent combine personal and work tasks into one to-do list.

Furthermore, most (83 per cent) Indian knowledge workers are using tools introduced to them in their workplace to organise their personal lives, especially senior leaders, highlighting the spillover effect of professional tools into personal organisation, said the report.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalWHO says AI use in health care gaining ground across EU

NationalSome boundaries should never be crossed: Army reiterates resolve ahead of Pahalgam attack anniv

MumbaiMumbai Accident: 60-Year-Old Man Killed After Speeding Bike Hits Him In Tardeo; Rider Arrested

InternationalJapanese PM sends ritual offering to Yasukuni Shrine

EntertainmentVignesh Raja on Dhanush’s ‘Kara’: 'The story was originally set in Vellore but I adapted it to Ramanathapuram'

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSensex nears 79,000 on softer crude, easing geopolitical tensions

BusinessIndian markets open in green, but on a cautious note amid global geopolitical uncertainties

BusinessS. Korean firm Naver partners TCS for AI, digital biz opportunities in India

BusinessHD Hyundai partners Indian govt entities for joint shipyard project

BusinessS. Korea's exports jump 49.4 pc on robust chip demand