OCTOBER 26, 2013
Dennis Gray suspected that workers in his pest-control company were spending too much time on personal issues during the workday. So the general manager of Accurid Pest Solutions in Virginia quietly installed a piece of GPS tracking software on the company-issued smartphones of its 18 drivers. The software allowed Gray to log onto his computer to see a map displaying the location and movement of his staff. One employee, he discovered, was visiting the same address a few times a week for a few hours during the workday. At that point, Gray told the driver he was being tracked.
A 2012 report found that 37% of companies that send employees out on service calls track the real time location of workers via their hand held devices or vehicles. High tech monitoring feels like a violation of privacy to some workers, but employers say such measures improve workplace safety and productivity while also helping to reduce theft, protect secrets and investigate harassment or discrimination claims. No federal statutes restrict the use of GPS by employers, nor force them to disclose whether they are using it.
Companies that keep quiet about tracking efforts may miss out on the benefits of deterrence. A recent study of NCR’s theft-monitoring software used in 392 restaurants found a 22% reduction in server theft after the software was installed and staffers were told about it. Drink sales, meanwhile, rose 10%. Being watched, researchers found, made waitstaff work harder.
This post provided courtesy of Jay and Barry’s OM Blog at www.heizerrenderom.wordpress.com. Professors Jay Heizer and Barry Render are authors of Operations Management , the world’s top selling textbook in its field, published by Pearson.