What is fauxductivity?
Fauxductivity is the illusion of productivity—when employees appear busy without delivering meaningful results. They attend endless meetings, reply to emails instantly, or keep their screens active, but fail to focus on concrete outcomes. Simply put, it is the act of looking occupied without actually accomplishing anything of value.
In today’s hybrid and remote work environments, the phenomenon has become more visible. Employees join back-to-back virtual meetings without contributing anything substantial, or respond constantly to emails and maintain long to-do lists while failing to complete important tasks. The performance of busyness has replaced actual productivity.
History
The impulse to appear busy is not new. Long before remote work, employees stayed late in the office unnecessarily, shuffled papers, or sent frequent updates to signal commitment. Productivity was once measured by hours spent at one’s desk—physical presence became a proxy for dedication.
Technology introduced new avenues for performative work: emails, chats and online meetings became tools for appearing engaged. The pandemic and the shift to remote work accelerated fauxductivity. Without traditional visibility, employees began overcompensating—overcommunicating, attending unnecessary meetings, or multitasking to signal they were “always on.” As the boundaries between work and personal life blurred, fauxductivity became easier to sustain and harder to detect.
Why is it relevant for HR?
For HR leaders, fauxductivity is a serious cultural and performance issue that affects employee wellbeing, organisational efficiency, and trust between managers and teams.
It is not always about laziness. Often, employees feel pressure to prove they are working hard, even if their time is spent on activities of little value. Fauxductivity is fuelled by unclear productivity metrics and surveillance anxiety—employees believe appearances matter more than results.
When employees appear constantly busy without meaningful outcomes, they feel drained, exhausted, and unfulfilled—leading to burnout. When performative work becomes the norm, it breeds a toxic culture. When fauxductivity is rewarded over genuine productivity, high performers become disillusioned and leave.
Human resource must redefine how productivity is measured, shifting from activity-based metrics to outcome-based measures. This requires clarity: employees must understand that delivery of results matters more than the show of busyness.
How HR can address fauxductivity
Redefine productivity – Encourage managers to measure outcomes and impact rather than screen time or email responsiveness.
Ensure psychological safety – Create an environment where employees do not feel compelled to perform busyness to be valued. They should be free to prioritise meaningful work.
Communicate clearly – Streamline processes and clarify expectations to eliminate unnecessary check-ins, overlapping meetings, and redundant communication.
Recognise genuine effort – Train managers to differentiate between fauxductivity and real contribution. Reward outcomes, not appearances.
Support flexibility – Flexible schedules discourage the culture of “always on” and allow employees to work when they are most effective.
To shift from performative culture to meaningful outcomes, HR must first strengthen employee engagement and trust. Productivity will follow naturally. The goal is to build a healthy workplace where employees focus on results—not on appearing busy.




1 Comment
Excellent article.