Slide 1: Why Remote Work Improves Productivity

Good morning. Today I want to share our findings on remote work productivity.
Over the past 18 months, our team surveyed 1,200 knowledge workers across
14 companies in the technology sector. The data shows a clear pattern:
remote workers are more productive, but only when certain conditions are met.

Slide 2: Our Methodology

We used a mixed-methods approach. First, we tracked output metrics across
200 engineering teams — lines of code, pull requests merged, and bug fix
turnaround time. Second, we conducted 45 in-depth interviews with team
leads. Third, we sent a structured survey to all 1,200 participants asking
about their work environment, meeting load, and self-reported productivity.

One limitation: our sample is biased toward large tech companies in North
America. We cannot say these findings apply to manufacturing or retail.

Slide 3: Key Finding — Productivity Rose 22%

The headline number: teams that switched to remote-first work saw an
average 22% increase in measurable output over 12 months. Code commits
rose 18%, pull request throughput rose 27%, and bug resolution time
dropped 14%.

However, this number masks important variation. Teams with strong async
communication practices saw gains of 35% or more. Teams that tried to
replicate office hours remotely — with constant video calls — saw no
improvement or even slight declines.

Slide 4: The Three Conditions for Success

Our research identified three conditions that separate high-performing
remote teams from struggling ones:

1. Async-first communication: teams that default to written updates and
   use synchronous meetings sparingly performed best.

2. Clear output metrics: teams that measured results (not hours) had
   higher morale and better retention.

3. Dedicated workspace: employees with a separate room or quiet area
   reported 40% fewer distractions and higher satisfaction.

When all three conditions were present, productivity gains averaged 31%.
When none were present, productivity actually dropped 8%.

Slide 5: Unexpected Finding — Junior Developers Struggled

One finding we did not anticipate: junior developers with less than two
years of experience performed worse remotely. Their output dropped 12%
compared to office-based juniors. Interviews revealed they missed the
informal mentorship that happens in an office — quick questions at a
desk, overhearing senior conversations, and pair programming.

We recommend that companies assign each junior remote developer a
dedicated mentor with daily check-ins for at least the first six months.

Slide 6: Recommendations

Based on our findings, we recommend:

1. Adopt async-first workflows. Move status updates, code reviews, and
   design discussions to written channels.
2. Invest in mentorship programs for early-career staff.
3. Measure team output, not face time.
4. Provide a home-office stipend to help employees create dedicated
   workspaces.
5. Run quarterly surveys to track whether these conditions are being met.

Thank you. I am happy to take your questions.
