Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Most jobs in a company cannot be performed from home

- By Raj Moorthy

While organisati­ons are trying to implement the ‘ work from home’ rule amongst its employees during the COVID19 lockdown, it has come to a point of realizatio­n that 50 per cent of these jobs cannot be performed from home.

Meanwhile 15 per cent of companies feel working from home has always been a part of the organisati­on’s work culture and therefore the work from home arrangemen­t was seamless, through effective use of technology. 17 per cent of companies have faced challenges in terms of the availabili­ty of the required technologi­cal infrastruc­ture to work from home, which have not yet been addressed to a great degree. Seven per cent of organisati­ons feel that the employees have struggled to adjust to the culture of working from home while 11 per cent of organisati­ons have faced other challenges in remote working.

These points emerged in a survey carried out by Ernst & Young (EY) Sri Lanka amongst the business community in Sri Lanka by EY People Advisory Services, Senior Manager, Janani Seyone. She made a presentati­on on Thursday during a webinar organised by EY on “Sri Lankan Market Trends; The pivotal role of HR now, next and beyond”.

She also mentioned that industries mostly hit by the pandemic are manufactur­ing, constructi­on, tourism and hospitalit­y sectors which contribute­s 45 per cent to the country’s GDP while 50 per cent of the labour force are mainly from these sectors. Tourism and hospitalit­y will take as long as one year to recover from the pandemic while manufactur­ing and constructi­on will take at least nine months to recover, according to the survey. These industries have announced a 100 per cent reduction in capital expenditur­e, noted Ms. Seyone.

Further on the understand­ing what matters in the next three months, 3-6 months and beyond six months Ms. Seyone elaborated, in the next three months companies will be responding to the crisis focusing on business continuity and planning while the CEO and HR combine and protect its employees. Within 3-6 months companies will manage a restricted business, leading through ongoing business disruption and responding to medium term challenges and opportunit­ies. After six months organisati­ons will understand the ‘ new normal’ that will emerge beyond the crisis and reframe the future to align with it.

Meanwhile United Motors Lanka Chairman, Sunil Wijesinha being a panelist during the webinar stated, these are crucial times where many incidents of this nature have taken place in the past and companies have overcome them with the help of its employees. Heads of organisati­ons must communicat­e properly with its employees while he stressed that pay cuts should be the last resort and only if it’s an unbearable large cost for an organisati­on.

Employers Federation of Ceylon, Director General/CEO, Kanishka Weerasingh­e added that good dialogue, good relationsh­ips and good policies must be there between the employer and the employee in mitigating the crisis.

 ??  ?? The counter at the Minuwangod­a People’s Bank.
Pic by M.A. Pushpa Kumara.
The counter at the Minuwangod­a People’s Bank. Pic by M.A. Pushpa Kumara.

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