In 2010, Kimberly D. Elsbach, Daniel M. Cable, and Jeffrey W. Sherman published a study in Human Relations titled “How Passive ‘Face Time’ Affects Perceptions of Employees: Evidence of Spontaneous Trait Inference” — a paper that, quietly and without fanfare, exposed one of the most consequential illusions in organizational life. The researchers set out to understand something deceptively simple: does merely being seen at work, without doing anything visibly productive, shape how managers and colleagues evaluate employees? What they found was not just interesting — it was a direct challenge to how most organizations believe performance is being assessed. The study revealed that passive physical presence alone, the act of simply occupying a desk or being visibly online, triggers automatic, unconscious judgments in the people who observe it. Managers and peers draw conclusions about an employee’s character, reliability, and dedication based on nothing more than the fact that they are there. No output required. No quality of work considered.
This finding would be troubling enough on its own. But set it against what is happening in workplaces today, and the implications become harder to ignore. A 2023 survey of 1,000 U.S.-based full-time employees conducted by workforce analytics firm Visier found that close to half of any given organization is spending 1.25 days per week on work designed not to produce meaningful output but to signal effort and availability to those around them (visier.com). A separate 2024 survey of more than 1,500 full-time U.S. workers by BambooHR found that 79 percent of in-office workers and 88 percent of remote workers feel pressure to prove they are being productive at any given moment. Perhaps most telling of all, 42 percent of employees who returned to the office said they feel like they are showing up purely for visibility, not because the work demands it (bamboohr.com). These are not fringe behaviors. They are, by the data, mainstream organizational reality. And the Elsbach, Cable, and Sherman study tells us exactly why: because the organizations these employees work in have, often without meaning to, trained people to understand that presence is rewarded.
What The Research Actually Found
The Elsbach et al. study drew on both qualitative fieldwork with professional office workers and a controlled experimental study, giving its conclusions unusual depth and credibility. The researchers identified two distinct forms of what they called passive face time. The first is expected face time — simply being seen at work during normal business hours. The second is extracurricular face time — being seen at work beyond those hours, whether staying late, arriving early, or remaining visibly connected outside standard schedules. Each form, the researchers found, produces a different but equally powerful psychological effect in observers. Expected face time leads colleagues and supervisors to infer that an employee is dependable. Extracurricular face time leads them to infer that an employee is committed. Neither inference is based on actual observation of work quality, output, or results.
What makes the findings genuinely striking is that these inferences happen spontaneously. Observers do not sit down and deliberate. They do not consciously ask themselves whether the person at that desk is doing meaningful work. The trait attribution — dependable, committed — fires automatically, below the level of conscious awareness, simply because someone is physically or digitally present. The researchers describe this as spontaneous trait inference, a well-documented phenomenon in social psychology that explains how people form impressions of strangers and colleagues without intending to. In organizational settings, this matters enormously, because the same managers who are making these unconscious snap judgments are also the ones signing off on performance reviews, recommending promotions, and deciding who leads the next critical project.
The Organizational System That Makes This Rational
It would be easy to frame performative productivity as an individual character problem — as laziness dressed up in the costume of effort, or a personal decision to game the system. But the research does not support that reading. What Elsbach and her colleagues uncovered is a structural phenomenon. Employees are not performing busyness because they are fundamentally dishonest or disengaged. They are performing it because the environment they work in has established, through consistent signals and rewards, that visibility is a legitimate proxy for value. When managers unconsciously equate presence with dependability and commitment, and when those same managers control career progression, employees respond rationally to the incentive structure in front of them.
This creates a feedback loop that organizations rarely examine directly. Managers reward visible presence. Employees learn that visible presence is rewarded. Employees optimize for visible presence. Managers see employees optimizing for visible presence and interpret it as dedication. The loop tightens. Over time, the organization develops what Adam Waytz, a professor of ethics and decision management at the Kellogg School of Management, has called a culture of busyness — a shared norm in which being visibly occupied becomes not just acceptable but actively expected. Waytz has noted in published commentary that cultures like these do not improve organizational results and, more critically, exact a meaningful toll on the mental health of the people inside them. The busy trap, in other words, is not an accident. It is an emergent property of how the organization has been designed to see and evaluate people.
The Costs Organizations Are Not Counting
Organizations that measure presence instead of performance tend to believe they are managing productivity. The Visier data suggests the opposite is true. If the average employee is spending close to a day and a half each week on work designed to look productive rather than be productive, the financial and operational implications are significant. Separately, research cited by Jessica Rodell of the University of Georgia, referenced in reporting by Fast Company, found that employees who brag about being stressed and busy, a classic signal of performative overload, actually tend to accomplish less than their peers and are viewed more negatively by the colleagues who observe them. The performance of busyness, in this sense, does not even achieve the reputational goals it is designed to achieve. It is a costly strategy that often fails on its own terms, and yet organizations continue to create the conditions that make it feel necessary.
There is also a quality-of-work dimension that tends to get lost in these conversations. When employees are optimizing for visibility rather than output, they gravitates toward tasks that are easy to see — responding to messages quickly, attending every meeting, staying late at their desks — and away from the kind of deep, uninterrupted, cognitively demanding work that actually moves organizations forward. A software engineer thinking through an architecture problem, a strategist working through a market positioning framework, a finance leader modeling a complex scenario — none of these look busy in any way that passive face time captures. And yet they represent exactly the kind of work organizations claim to value most. The busy trap does not just waste time. It actively redirects attention away from the work that matters and toward the work that shows.
What This Means For Managers And Leaders
The most important implication of the Elsbach et al. study for practicing managers is not what employees are doing wrong. It is what managers are doing unconsciously. The study demonstrates that the trait inferences managers make from passive face time are spontaneous and below conscious awareness — which means that even managers who believe they evaluate on results are likely making presence-based judgments without realizing it. A manager who genuinely believes she promotes the most productive people may, in practice, be promoting the people she sees most consistently. The research does not accuse managers of dishonesty. It reveals a cognitive process that operates without their knowledge and, unless interrupted, shapes organizational outcomes in ways that have nothing to do with meritocracy.
For organizations that want to address this, the research points in a clear direction: make performance evaluation explicitly output-based, and make that orientation visible enough to override the default cognitive shortcuts. This means defining what good work looks like in terms of deliverables, decisions, and outcomes rather than hours logged or presence maintained. It means training managers to recognize the passive face time bias by name — because awareness is the first condition for interrupting an automatic process. It also means examining how organizational norms around availability, responsiveness, and in-office presence are communicated from the top, since the Kellogg School’s Waytz has argued that the only reliable way to change a culture of performative busyness is through leaders who visibly model different behavior and put structural policies behind it.
Questions The Research Does Not Settle
The Elsbach, Cable, and Sherman study was conducted in professional office environments in the United States, at a time when remote and hybrid work were considerably less common than they are today. One of the more urgent open questions is how passive face time bias operates in a world where physical presence has been partially or fully replaced by digital signals — response times on messaging platforms, camera-on norms during video calls, login and logout timestamps in productivity monitoring software. The BambooHR survey data suggests the pressure to perform productivity has migrated online, with 64 percent of remote workers admitting to maintaining a constant online presence even when not actively working. But whether digital visibility triggers the same spontaneous trait inferences as physical presence, and whether the same bias toward dependability and commitment applies, has not been thoroughly studied.
There is also an unresolved question about how the busy trap interacts with organizational culture across different industries, geographies, and work models. In environments where output is highly measurable — sales figures, code commits, published units — the visibility premium may be weaker, because managers have concrete alternatives to presence-based inference. But in knowledge work environments, where the most valuable contributions are often invisible by nature, the conditions that make passive face time decisive may be more entrenched than any single study has yet captured. Organizations now navigating the return-to-office debate, the rollout of productivity monitoring tools, and the redesign of performance management systems are, whether they know it or not, making decisions that will either reinforce or disrupt the busy trap. The research suggests they should be making those decisions with considerably more awareness of what they are actually measuring — and what they are accidentally rewarding.
Reference
Elsbach, K. D., Cable, D. M., & Sherman, J. W. (2010). How passive ‘face time’ affects perceptions of employees: Evidence of spontaneous trait inference. Human Relations, 63(6), 735–760. https://doi.org/10.1177/0018726709353139








