Data show that 36 percent to 56 percent of Americans can work from home and that about 80 percent want to work from home all or some of the time. A majority of managers and executives, conversely, have been leery of transitioning to remote work. Now, with the coronavirus pandemic having pushed about two-thirds of the U.S. workforce into the virtual workspace, it seems like a good time to weigh the pros and cons of employees working from home.
Data and stories posted over time track an increase in support for working from home. They also indicate there are more upsides than downsides in the virtual workplace, that a majority of workers favor a shift to virtual, and that pushback on remote working largely has come from managers and largely involves a lack of trust. Those claims are supported by these pre-pandemic sources.
Quora asks this question: “Why Don’t Large Companies Embrace Remote Working?” One response, in an item updated Nov. 23, 2019, was representative. It’s from Jarvis cofounder-CEO Faris Mersi. “If there’s one word I could use to answer your question, it’s mistrust.”
Mersi explains: “Employers need to shake off this antiquated belief that employees must come to work from 9-5 and be housed under one roof for effective work to take place. Unless employees are involved in some type of manual labor where they have to be on-site, it’s simply illogical to oppose remote work. Still, here are several reasons why large organizations, in particular, fail to embrace remote work”:
A relevant story on the SHRM website is titled “Why Are Companies Ending Remote Work?” It was posted on May 7, 2019. Here’s the subhead: “Research on the topic comes to differing conclusions.”
The story notes that the Bank of New York Mellon Corp. considered and then dropped (after pushback) a plan to recall remote workers to brick-and-mortar locations. Also thinking about abandoning remote work were IBM, Yahoo, Aetna, and Best Buy.
SHRM shared these theories “for this change of heart about remote work”:
Here’s a headline on a story posted Feb. 28, 2019: “Remote Reservations: Why Managers Are Afraid to Let Employees Work Virtually.” The writer is Laura Ferrer, a remote-work strategist. Her answer, in a word: fear (largely fear of change and the risks it brings).
Here’s the takeaway from her article: “There are both right and wrong ways to implement remote work. If you’re holding back because you’re only looking at the wrong examples, you are going to miss out on many rewards. It’s time to publicize the right way of going remote and bust the myths that are preventing you from capitalizing on the benefits of a virtual workforce.”
Here’s a look at remote work statistics posted by Smallbizgenius.net before the dawn of COVID-19.
The American Psychological Association posted a story on its website on Oct. 1, 2019. The headline succinctly sums up the story – The future of remote work: When it’s done right, telework can improve employee productivity, creativity and morale, psychologists’ research finds.
Things (COVID-19) happen. Times change. The Bank of New York Mellon Corp. backed off on considerations in November 2018 to bring remote workers back to its buildings, so it was well positioned when the pandemic struck.
Here are some snapshots from the timeline of the coronavirus-driven transition to remote work.
Consider this headline from Bloomberg Law on May 29, 2020: “BNY Mellon Says Working Remotely Will Continue After Pandemic.”
Statistics can shed light on an issue or cast shadows. For instance, Forbes, in a story published in April 2020, cites studies from Norway and the United States that put the number of people who could work from home at 36 percent and 37 percent, respectively.
Global Workplace Analytics, presenting data in March 2020, reported that 56 percent of respondents indicated that some or all of their work could be done from home.
The polling company Gallup, in a report dated May 22, 2020, posted these highlights from a survey on remote work:
Are those numbers flawed, or were the pollsters clocking a fluctuating need-driven race into the virtual workplace? Still, how do you go from reporting a remote work capacity of 36 percent (in April) and 56 percent (in March) to “almost 70 percent” clocking in at home in May?
The Atlantic isn’t the arbiter of what will happen to and with remote work, but a headline on a story posted May 4, 2020, says this: Work from home is here to stay. The subhead says this: The future of jobs after the pandemic is a blurry mix of work, life, pajamas, and Zoom.
There’s an editor’s note appended to the story, explaining that it’s part of a series on “the world we’re leaving behind, and the one being remade by the pandemic.”
The multinational professional services network shared survey results on June 25, 2020. Under the heading “A flexible workweek has broad support,” PwC notes:
Global Workplace Analytics boldly predicts that remote work won’t just survive the coronavirus, it will thrive because of it. The research and consulting firm says:
Employers pushed into the remote experience by the pandemic have embraced it because of benefits beyond social distancing in the time of COVID-19. Here are some of the pros and cons.
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