Algorithms Drive Management-Free Workplaces
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New roles, no bossesgettyHow do things work out when people are managed by algorithms, versus actual human beings? Likely, jobs get shredded into microtasks. At this time, algorithmically managed jobs tend to be contract or gig roles. But the day may come in which full-time jobs will be guided, to some degree, by algorithms for better or worse. Can people accomplish work without direct supervision by live human bosses?This is a question that has been studied by Lindsey Cameron, professor at the Wharton School of University of Pennsylvania. A lack of direct human oversight can be freeing, and at the same time, frustrating to workers, she explained in a recent interview published by Knowledge@Wharton.Theres this joy in schedule flexibility, and then theres this issue of when things dont go right whether its pay, something with a customer, or not getting rides. Then youre talking to a robot and its hard to get resolution.The best working use case for algorithmic management is working for ridesharing apps such as Uber or Lyft, which employ software to manage their contract drivers. Workers enjoy the flexibility the app work provides, but at the same time, they could be punished being kicked off the app for several days, due to a bad rating from a customer. There is no human to appeal such machine-made decisions.Ultimately, algorithmic management may extend its reach beyond gig work, Cameron said. The common denominator is that algorithmic management slices work into the smallest possible units or microtasks a process known as deskilling, which has been the core practice seen in assembly lines for more than a century. Except microtasks get mush more granular than assembly lines.Rideshare is built upon a lot of microtasks, Cameron pointed out. Workers make decision microtask by microtask, such as, will I accept this ride or not? Am I going to follow the GPS, Ubers or Wazes, to go where Im going? Am I going to talk to the customer? Which way will I drive? And then do I rate them or not?'These moves are all very small components of a task, and since they are so small, "they can be algorithmically managed, Cameron said. And at the same time, the workers feel like they have choice. Because there are all these little individual elements, I have a very small but very real amount of choice. And I think thats one of the reasons why people like this work so much, is this feeling of choice.A risk with deskilling and de-splicing the work is that it may drive down wages, since people cant really build skill, she cautioned. And algorithms make mistakes. Without a human in the loop, the human is lost.The problem is people hold these algorithms to god-like status, that they cant make a mistake, she continued. Theres always going to be a gap between how the technology is designed, and how its used and implemented by the workers. And in that space, you see agency, but you also see mistakes the technical system is making. And I think the more we start getting blinded by techno-utopianism, that increases the risk.Cameron added that she worked part-time as an Uber driver for three years. I never spoke to a single employee of Uber. Hiring, firing, evaluating, disciplining, were all done by an algorithmic management system. And it really gives us a precursor or a view into the future.The result of having workers who are being algorithmically managed, microtask by microtask, calls for a rethinking of the way organizations are structured. Because this is not Walmart. But nor is it really a bunch of free-floating consultants that are meeting through a job board. Its a new organizational form, and it does have some responsibilities and liabilities in play.
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