-Many blue collar jobs can't be done on a computer, too many to list.
-IT personnel and experts have "IT" bias, including software developers.
-It has been tested and reported that nearly 55-70% of communication is lost via phone or in computer writing in texts and emails.
-25% of the time trying to communicate only by computer or Ai causes more
miscommunication and inconvenience than not and more so for the recipient (customer) than the business (sender).
-Sight, personal presence, give more accurate feedback.
-Using computer generated interaction texts or messaging for more than simple responses that do not require human judgement and expertise via experiences are most non-effective.
-Human to human direct contact provides the best communication experiences and is the most effective means of human to human interaction.
I have access to exclusively medicine related professional research, as that is my business and a large cost to me personally if I go outside my parameters when researching. I tried to look for strictly business professional research sources too, for those who are more business/employee focused, but those were expensive also. I began with 66 articles and tried to narrow it down to the most interesting. I mostly read abstracts to save me time.
Title are in bold:
Telephone consultation and triage: Effects on health care use and patient satisfaction.
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Your ears become your eyes: Managing the absence of visibility in NHS direct.
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Work Tasks That Can Be Done from Home: Evidence on Variation within and across Occupations and Industries.” Adams-Prassl, A., T. Boneva, M. Golin, and C. Rauh. 2020. CEPR
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“
Why Working from Home Will Stick.”Barrero, J., N. Bloom, and S. Davis. 2021.
Working paper, Dept. Econ., Stanford Univ.
“Job Satisfaction and Work-Life Balance: Differences between Homework and Work at the Workplace of the Company.”Bellmann, L., and O. Hübler. 2020. IZA
Discussion Paper no. 13504, Inst. Study Labor, Bonn.
“Does Working from Home Work? Evidence from a Chinese Experiment.”Bloom, N., J. Liang, J. Roberts, and Z. J. Ying. 2015.
Q.J.E. 130:165–218
“Work-from-Anywhere: The Productivity Effects of Geographic Flexibility.” Choudhury, P., C. Foroughi, and B. Laron. 2019.
Strategic Management J. 42:655–83.
“How Many Jobs Can Be Done at Home?” Dingel, J. I., and B. Neiman. 2020.
J. Public Econ.189:104235.
“‘Working’ Remotely?” Emanuel, N., and E. Harrington. 2021.
Working paper, Dept. Econ., Harvard Univ.
Worker Productivity during Lockdown and Working from Home: Evidence from Self-Reports.Etheridge, B., Y. Wang, and L. Tang. 2020. “”
Covid Econ. 52:118–51.
Covid Economics - Issue 52.
I Am Close to Quitting My Career’: Mothers Step Back at Work to Cope with Pandemic Parenting, Financial Times. 2021, March 7.
‘I am close to quitting my career’: Mothers step back at work to cope with pandemic parenting.
“Where’s the Spark? How Lockdown Caused a Creativity Crisis.” January 17.
Where’s the spark? How lockdown caused a creativity crisis.
“Working from Home and Management Controls.” Flassak, K., J. Haag, C. Hofmann, C. Lechner, N. Schwaiger, and R. Zacherl. 2021.
Working paper, School Management, Ludwig Maximilian Univ. Munich.
Replication Data for ‘Work from Home and Productivity: Evidence from Personnel and Analytics Data on Information Technology Professionals.’” Gibbs, M., F. Mengel, and C. Siemroth. 2022. “Harvard Dataverse
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“Working from Home in Developing Countries.”Gottlieb, C., J. Grobovšek, M. Poschke, and F. Saltiel. 2021.
European Econ. Rev. 133:103679.
“Which Jobs Are Done from Home? Evidence from the American Time Use Survey.” Hensvik, L., T. Le Barbanchon, and R. Rathelot. 2020. CEPR
Discussion Paper no. DP14611, Centre Econ. Policy Res., London.
“Cognitive Performance in Remote Work: Evidence from Professional Chess.”Künn, S., C. Seel, and D. Zegners. 2022.
Econ. J. 132:1218–32.
“Measuring Remote Knowledge Work Using Big Data.”Kwan, A. 2021.
Working paper, Bus. School, Hong Kong Univ.
“The Effects of Remote Work on Collaboration among Information Workers.”Yang, L., D. Holtz, S. Jaffe, et al. 2022.
Nature Human Behaviour 6:43–54.
“Internet Communication Versus Face-to-face Interaction in Quality of Life, ”P. S. N. Lee, L. Leung, V. Lo, C. Xiong, and T. Wu, Soc. Indic. Res., vol. 100, no. 3, pp. 375–389, Feb. 2011, doi: 10.1007/s11205-010-9618-3.
“The Importance of Face-to-Face Communication in the Modern Workforce,” Lifesize, Oct. 29, 2019.
Lifesize (accessed Jun. 24, 2021).
I began with 66 articles and tried to narrow it down to the most interesting. I mostly read abstracts to save me time.