Calgary Herald

THE RISE AND FALL OF WORKING FROM HOME

Some offices rethinking policies that may be too lenient, flexible

- REBECCA GREENFIELD Bloomberg

Last year, Richard Laermer decided to let his employees work from home on a regular basis. “We hire adults, they shouldn’t be tied to the office five days a week,” said Laermer, who owns a New Yorkbased public relations firm. “I always assumed that you can get your work done anywhere, as long as you actually get it done.” Turns out, he was wrong. Employees took advantage of the perk, Laermer said. One was unavailabl­e for hours at a time. Another wouldn’t communicat­e with co-workers all day, which Laermer found suspicious. The last straw, he said, was when someone refused to come in for a meeting because she had plans to go to the Hamptons. “That was the most unbelievab­ly nervy thing I’d heard in years,” he said.

Ten months in, he scrapped the benefit and now requires all of his employees to come into the office every day.

While telecommut­ing, the umbrella term for any work occurring outside the traditiona­l office, has ballooned over the last 20 years, some offices are rethinking overly broad policies. Flexible work remains popular at many organizati­ons, but most companies want workers at work at least some — if not most — of the time. More than 60 per cent of organizati­ons surveyed by the Society of Human Resource Management this year said they allow some type of telecommut­ing, up from 20 per cent in 1996. But telecommut­ing comes in many flavours, and 77 per cent of organizati­ons don’t let people work from home on a full-time basis. Most employers allow ad-hoc remote work for the person who needs to stay home for the plumber or wait for a package.

Technology such as chat programs and collaborat­ion software made remote work feasible for many white collar workers in the last couple of decades. Employees love flexibilit­y, often rating it high on benefits surveys. Parents in particular say it’s “extremely important,” a 2013 Pew survey found. Researcher­s have argued that unconventi­onal work hours could even help close the pay gap.

In a bid to attract and retain employees — and cut down on real estate costs — companies permitted more remote work, and employees took advantage.

At the same time, work has also become more team-based. Only 38 per cent of companies are “functional­ly” organized today with workers grouped together by job type, a 2016 Deloitte survey found. Most comprise collaborat­ive groups that shift depending on the work. Deloitte found that one California organizati­on was made up of over 30,000 constantly shifting teams.

“I think that’s why we’re seeing remote work come back in,” said Erica Volini, a U.S. Human Capital Leader at Deloitte. “In order to work in teams, you need a higher level of collaborat­ion.”

Some organizati­ons found the most lenient work-from-home policies kept workers too isolated for that kind of work. These companies “took it to the extreme on virtual work,” added Volini.

Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp. is one such company. Earlier this year the tech giant told 2,000 U.S. workers they could no longer work from home and about the same number of employees that they had to commute into offices more often. Facing 20 consecutiv­e quarters of falling revenue, IBM hopes that bringing people back together will lead to faster, more productive, and more creative workers. (A 2012 report from IBM found that companies with flexible work policies reported improvemen­ts in productivi­ty and cost savings.)

“IBM’s strategy is about adopting the best work method for the work being done,” said an IBM spokespers­on. “For example, small, multi-disciplina­ry teams of engineers, coders, project managers and designers work in close proximity, often directly with clients or end-users, continuall­y generating and refining ideas.”

One of the challenges with ending remote work is keeping employees happy.

“It’s going to require organizati­ons to think about how to still provide flexibilit­y for their workforce,” said Deloitte’s Volini.

Companies removing the perk risk employee backlash and attrition. IBM, for instance, has been careful not to eliminate all flexible work arrangemen­ts. The company still offers ad-hoc workfrom-home arrangemen­ts to accommodat­e appointmen­ts and childcare needs.

Having everyone in the office has had “quite a positive impact” on business, said Laermer. Meetings are more productive, and employee morale has improved, he said. Laermer claims that employees “didn’t mind” losing their freedom. “Youngish people need structure,” he said, adding that they have small apartments and might not have a good place to work, anyway. He still offers flex time and lets workers leave at 3 p.m. on Fridays.

“I think people have to be trusted,” Laermer said. “But the working-from-home thing has to be on a per-person basis, and it can’t be very often. It just doesn’t work.”

I think people have to be trusted. But the working-fromhome thing has to be on a per-person basis, and it can’t be very often.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? Some companies are trying to find a balance between keeping employees happy with flexible work arrangemen­ts and maintainin­g efficiency, connection­s and teamwork in the office as telecommut­ing has gained popularity over the last 20 years. A survey found...
CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG/GETTY IMAGES Some companies are trying to find a balance between keeping employees happy with flexible work arrangemen­ts and maintainin­g efficiency, connection­s and teamwork in the office as telecommut­ing has gained popularity over the last 20 years. A survey found...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada