I get feedback emails from Microsoft productivity at work, and it's not even close to what happens. As far as I can figure out it takes the percentage of time that you work on emails and teams and calls that productivity and then send reports which reduce my productivity because I have to read them.
If I have a routine task to do, and I automate it away, for example, by provisioning about a million servers using scripts, and my time working on the scripts is about a day, will it show as a productivity fail because I only worked a day, even though I did the boring task a million times, automatically? Analytics may not account correctly in this regard. Software Development and System Administration are the most probable to give these kind of false-positives.
Take an astronaut to launch.