Following up on an earlier post on Business Productivity, taking into consideration the often unmeasured and therefore under-accounted benefits of productivity. The first point was to buy Macs. The next was buying employees larger monitors or second monitors.
In the post that eventually led to this post, Jason Calacanis, CEO of Mahalo.com does some math for us:
“(each employee) will save at least 30 minutes a day, which is 100 hours a year… which is at least $2,000 a year…. which is $6,000 over three years. A second monitor cost $300-500 depending on which one you get. That means you’re getting 10-20x return on your investment… and you’ve got a happy team member”
Also worth mentioning are studies by monitor manufacturer NEC (.pdf summary here) and Pfeiffer Consulting for Apple (.pdf summary here) which indicate even larger returns on investment.
NEC’s study has two findings which I find very interesting. First, if your employees are using a single 19″ (or smaller) monitor, you are adversely affecting productivity and “worker well-being”. Second, equipping employees who are less technically savvy with second or larger monitors, gives them an ever greater productivity boost than their co-workers.
As for the “best” size, it varies slightly according to the tasks, though for most, a single monitor of 24″ - 26″, or a dual monitor set-up with a pair of 20″ monitors is what the study finds offering the greatest productivity gains for typical office tasks; word processing and spreadsheets.
In my experience, for video editors and SFX artists, two 23″ monitors is assumed to be the bare minimum, and it’s clear that for other creative tasks, this would be a good starting point as well. So the next time your creatives ask for 30″ Apple Cinema HD Displays, buy them with barely an afterthought; the $1,799 monitors will pay for themselves many times over. In fact, the Pfeiffer Consulting report calculates a ROI of $5,875 - $23,500 within a year (!) depending on the salary of the creative professional.
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