Employees across the globe have one thing they agree on: Working from home part of the week has its benefits. That’s according to new WFH Research, which found companies’ remote work plans “fall short” of what their workers are demanding. Even as doubts of WFH productivity grow at some major firms, research from Stanford University and Ifo Institute found staffers on average prefer at least two days at home – that’s one full day more than many are getting. So who will win the tug-of-war? “The question is whether the bosses or the bossed will yield the most,” writes The Economist.
By Alessandra Riemer, Editor at LinkedIn News
The fight over working from home goes global
BY: MICHELE HARTZ
Work from home? – good for environment, good for WLB (#worklifebalance), but good for productivity?
More and more research is coming out, some contrary to each other. Happier people are more productive, and a great WLB makes happier people, but then do we “toil” too much at home – loosing productivity by estimates here of 18+ %.
Working from home for just one day a week could save over 379kg of #co2emissions , according to Loop*- CO2 saving is equivalent to a short-haul flight from London to Istanbul*.
This is just the savings in driving- there is also savings across the entire infrastructure of transport use , maintenance, and infrastructure.
Let alone the savings to companies in less office space potentially needed, heating, supplies and other overheads.
Would these overhead savings negate losses in productivity? And would it really just need a management and training shift – to set #workfromhome rhythms. Utilizing psychometrics to identify work types/ work rhythms for different styles.
Could better understanding and management – take advantage of work from home, and close the gap on productivity whilst raising the cost and environment savings, as boosting work, life balance?
And then we have the #4dayweek #fourth ! Where early trials have shown greatest productivity because of more intense focus and less distraction*, with Spain and Scotland, wining elections with the promise of trialing a four-day week, Here in Australia, a Senate committee inquiry has recommended a national trial of the four-day week*.