Agriculture among the best industries for employee productivity

New research from the iOpener Institute for People and Performance, which analyzed responses from over 30,000 professionals, reveals significant differences between personal productivity levels in different countries and industry sectors.

The findings also show a clear relationship between Happiness at Work and personal productivity.

The Institute measured components of Happiness at Work including energy levels, time engaged and feelings of happiness. Productivity was measured as ‘time on task’; the time that workers are actively producing outputs that make a tangible contribution to their organization.

The international average for time on task is 58.8%, but there are significant differences between the various industry sectors. Agriculture is one of the best performing sectors with 61.3% time on task but the Biotechnology sector is at the bottom of the table with 53.2%.

Even greater differences are shown when comparing the different countries surveyed. Mexico is shown to have the highest productivity (73.2% of time on task), whilst Portugal has the lowest (43.3%).


Within both sets of data, the sectors and countries that show the highest levels of productivity also perform strongly in the measurements of Happiness at Work.

Jessica Pryce-Jones, founder director of the iOpener Institute and author of “Happiness at Work – Maximising Your Psychological Capital for Success”, notes, “Whilst broad correlations between Happiness at Work and productivity have been recognized for some time, this detailed method of analyzing the components of Happiness at Work offers organizations actionable insights to formulate practical plans to improve their productivity.”

“The sector and country results offer organisations a contextual starting point; those in agriculture can ascertain how they measure up when compared to their sector and country averages, and tailor their productivity initiatives accordingly. The agricultural sector can take encouragement from scoring highly, but there is still room for further improvement, particularly as the industry looks to maintain its post-recession growth. ”