Untitle MediaUntitle Media
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Travel
    • Beautiful
    • Destinations
    • Discover
    • Followme
    • Vacation
  • Business
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Investment
    • Branding
    • Marketing
    • Startup
  • Technology
    • Computer
    • Electronics
    • Innovation
    • Smartphone
    • Software
  • Post SubmissionFREE
  • Member
    • Join Us
    • Login
Reading: Cognizant Sets 5-Minute Idle Rule for Employee Laptops
Aa
Untitle MediaUntitle Media
Aa
Follow US
Untitle Media > Blog > Technology > Cognizant Sets 5-Minute Idle Rule for Employee Laptops
Technology

Cognizant Sets 5-Minute Idle Rule for Employee Laptops

Aimee
Posted Aimee
Updated 2025/11/18
Share
5 Min Read

Cognizant Introduces Stricter Employee Monitoring: Laptops Marked Idle After 5 Minutes


IT services major Cognizant is reportedly tightening its internal monitoring systems, bringing in stricter measures to track employee activity on company devices. Under the new setup, employees whose laptops remain inactive for more than five minutes will be classified as “idle”, while longer breaks will trigger additional alerts. The changes are being introduced gradually across teams, signalling a significant shift toward micro-level productivity tracking.


According to a report by Mint, the company has started onboarding selected employees onto ProHance—an advanced workforce management and analytics tool widely used in the IT industry. ProHance monitors keyboard and mouse movement to assess activity and log time spent on different tasks and applications. The initiative, which began about a month ago, suggests Cognizant is tightening oversight to address potential inefficiencies in day-to-day operations.


Under the new monitoring rules, any absence of device activity for more than 300 seconds (five minutes) will mark an employee as “idle.” If the system remains untouched for around 15 minutes, the software will classify the employee as being “away from the system.” Departments will roll out the tool at different speeds depending on workload and client process requirements.


Company Says Data Won’t Be Used for Performance Reviews


The increased monitoring has raised concerns among employees regarding micromanagement and potential links to performance evaluation. Cognizant, however, has clarified that this data will not be used for appraisal purposes. Instead, the company argues the tool is designed to analyse bottlenecks in client delivery workflows.


A company spokesperson told Mint:

“We occasionally use productivity measurement tools—a common industry practice—in selected business process management or intuitive operations projects at the request of clients. The aim is to understand process steps and time metrics to assess design inefficiencies, not employee performance.”


Cognizant is not alone in using such workforce analytics tools. Other major IT firms, including Wipro, have long relied on ProHance and similar software to track employee activity for client-driven projects.


Tracking Subject to Consent, But Employees Raise Concerns


Cognizant maintains that employees are being added to ProHance only after giving explicit consent. However, some employees claim the rollout felt less optional than stated. According to internal accounts shared with Mint, staff members were required to complete a mandatory training module on ProHance, which included a user agreement at the end. One employee said, “We received a compulsory course on the tool, and to complete it, we had to click ‘I agree’. There was no option to skip.”


Training materials reportedly cover metrics such as time spent per task, hours logged as productive, and usage patterns across different applications—raising questions on how granular the tracking will become.


Push for Higher Productivity Behind the Move


Reports suggest the stricter monitoring stems from pressure to ensure employees are delivering a fixed number of productive working hours, especially during remote or hybrid work arrangements. With rising client expectations and more process-driven contracts, Cognizant is believed to be seeking maximum transparency into how work hours are being utilised.


While the company insists the move is about improving workflow visibility, employees fear it marks a shift toward more intrusive workplace surveillance—one that could reshape working norms across the IT sector if widely adopted.

Aimee November 18, 2025
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Telegram Email
Leave a review Leave a review

Leave a review Click here to cancel reply.

Please select a rating!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Popular Posts

RecenyPosts

Hyderabad Woman Doctor Ends Life After US Visa Denial
India News
India must learn from China’s 9-9-6 ethic: Murthy renews push for 72-hour work culture
Business
Cognizant Sets 5-Minute Idle Rule for Employee Laptops
Technology
Unseen Footage Reveals Red Fort Bomber Defending Suicide Attacks, Sparks Security Concerns
India News
Bengaluru Metro Receives Alleged Terror Threat; Security Heightened Across Network
India News
42 Telangana Umrah Pilgrims Killed in Tragic Bus–Tanker Collision in Saudi Arabia
India News

You Might Also Like

SmartphoneTechnology

OnePlus 15 Packs Performance and Battery Muscle — But Falls Short in Key Areas?

November 15, 2025
SmartphoneTechnology

iPhone 18 Pro Max poised to redefine the global smartphone market

November 13, 2025
InnovationTechnology

OpenAI Rolls Out GPT-5.1 With Smarter, More Human-Like Traits

November 13, 2025
BusinessInnovationSmartphoneTechnology

Apple Building Satellite Features So You Can Text and Navigate Even Without Signal

November 10, 2025
Untitle Media

UNTITLE MEDIA provides media production and marketing services to local businesses and entrepreneurs helping them utilize online tools to grow their business and brand.

Facebook Like
Instagram Follow
  • Business
  • Branding
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Investment
  • Marketing
  • Startup
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Technology
  • Computer
  • Electronics
  • Innovation
  • Smartphone
  • Software
  • Travel
  • Destinations
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Science
  • Discover
  • Follow me
  • Vacation
  • World news

2024 © Untitle Media. All Rights Reserved.

  • Write for Us
  • FAQ’s
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Removed from reading list

Undo
Untitle Media Untitle Media
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?