Japanese firm to use drone to force overtime staff to go home

Authored by bbc.com and submitted by SimppaK
image for Japanese firm to use drone to force overtime staff to go home

Image copyright Taisei Image caption The firm, Taisei, plans to start trialling the drone in April next year

A Japanese firm is planning to use a drone to force employees out of their offices by playing music at them if they stay to work evening overtime.

The drone will fly through offices after hours playing Auld Lang Syne, which is commonly used to announce that stores are closing.

Japan has for years been trying to curb excessive overtime and the health issues and even deaths it can cause.

Experts were unimpressed, one branding it a "silly" idea.

According to Japanese media, office security and cleaning firm Taisei will develop the device with drone maker Blue Innovation and telecommunications company NTT East.

The camera-equipped drone will take flights through the office space playing the famous Scottish tune.

"You can't really work when you think 'it's coming over any time now' and hear Auld Lang Syne along with the buzz," Norihiro Kato, a director at Taisei, told news agency AFP.

Taisei plans to start the drone service in April 2018 as a trial within their own company and later in the year offer it to others.

"Will this help? The short answer is: no," Seijiro Takeshita, professor of management and information at the University of Shizuoka told the BBC.

"It's a pretty silly thing and companies are doing this just because they have to be seen to be doing something on the problem."

The issue of excessive overtime is deeply rooted in the work culture and should be tackled from a more fundamental basis, he argues.

"Creating awareness is of course very important - but this is almost a hoax in my opinion."

Scott North, professor of sociology at Osaka University, said: "Even if this robotic harassment gets workers to leave the office, they will take work home with them if they have unfinished assignments."

He added: "To cut overtime hours, it is necessary to reduce workloads, either by reducing the time-wasting tasks and tournament-style competitions for which Japanese workplaces are notorious, or by hiring more workers."

Image caption Japan has some of the longest working hours in the developed world

Japan has long been struggling to break its decades-old work culture where it is frowned upon to leave before your colleagues or boss.

The problem of long hours has even led to the coining of a new word: karoshi, or dying from overwork.

The habit, especially among people who are new at a company, is seen as the cause of many health problems leading to strokes, heart attacks and suicides.

In October, advertising firm Dentsu was fined for violating labour laws after a young worker killed herself. She was later found to have worked 159 hours of overtime in one month.

Earlier this year, the government introduced Premium Fridays, encouraging companies to let their employees leave at 15:00 on the last Friday of each month.

But the plan has failed to have an impact so far, with many employees saying the last Friday of the month is one of their busiest days.

_AlreadyTaken_ on December 8th, 2017 at 15:35 UTC »

Young Japanese people frequently cite a lack of time and energy from exhausting work schedules as a major reason why they don't date or have an interest in marriage. If Japan doesn't want to collapse it needs to take this overwork issue seriously and make some hard legal and cultural changes and enforce them.

SilentAbandon on December 8th, 2017 at 14:54 UTC »

As the article itself says:

"Will this help? The short answer is: no," Seijiro Takeshita, professor of management and information at the University of Shizuoka told the BBC.

"It's a pretty silly thing and companies are doing this just because they have to be seen to be doing something on the problem."

This is a company attempt to pretend to be concerned while continuing to work people to death. I don’t get why Japanese corporate culture is so insistent on ridiculous work hours when it has been shown that productivity drops after 6 hours and Japan itself is on the lower end of productivity for 1st world countries_per_hour_worked)

You’d think a country that came up with the concept of kaizen would value efficiency and worker health over tradition. I suppose not.

CrudelyAnimated on December 8th, 2017 at 14:39 UTC »

A Japanese firm is planning to use a drone to force employees out of their offices by playing music at them if they stay to work evening overtime.

Do you want Team Karaoke Night, because this is how you get that.