The Monday after Daylight Savings Time is known as an awful day for productivity. People are sleep deprived and grumpy. So Reframe The Game -- choose to do something differently to involve and engage them for improving workplace performance and ownership involvement. Choose to impact motivation and productivity.
2. On Monday, the day after Daylight Savings…
March 10, 2014
Is normally a pretty awful day from a
productivity standpoint. People lose sleep on
Saturday night and are known to be sleepdeprived on Monday. All Day Monday!
The statistics on productivity for the Monday after Daylight Savings Time is started in March are dreadful. Because people lose sleep and Mondays are often bad anyway, research has solidly estimated the loss to be between $400 million and $2 billion dollars.
The statistics on productivity for the Monday after Daylight Savings Time is started in March are dreadful. Because people lose sleep and Mondays are often bad anyway, research has solidly estimated the loss to be between $400 million and $2 billion dollars.
The statistics on productivity for the Monday after Daylight Savings Time is started in March are dreadful. Because people lose sleep and Mondays are often bad anyway, research has solidly estimated the loss to be between $400 million and $2 billion dollars.
The statistics on productivity for the Monday after Daylight Savings Time is started in March are dreadful. Because people lose sleep and Mondays are often bad anyway, research has solidly estimated the loss to be between $400 million and $2 billion dollars.
The statistics on productivity for the Monday after Daylight Savings Time is started in March are dreadful. Because people lose sleep and Mondays are often bad anyway, research has solidly estimated the loss to be between $400 million and $2 billion dollars.