Who Benefits from Remote Work? – The Startup – Medium


Wie profiteert van Remote Work?

Het is niet alleen een extraatje voor de werknemer. Bedrijven profiteren ook.

Foto door NeONBRAND op  Unsplash

Een voormalig collega noemde onlangs werken op afstand als een 'extraatje' voor de werknemer. De meeste bedrijven waar ik voor heb gewerkt delen dezelfde mentaliteit. In hun ogen is het een beloning voor goed gedrag: als je op tijd opdaagt en je werk doet, ga je op een dag op afstand werken. Wat echter zelden wordt erkend, is dat ook op afstand werk aan de werkgever ten goede komt.

Bedrijf voordelen

Bedrijven met personeel op afstand kunnen geld besparen. Dat vond Cisco in hun enquête van 2009 van bijna 2.000 werknemers. "Het bedrijf heeft naar schatting een jaarlijkse besparing van $ 277 miljoen aan productiviteit gegenereerd door werknemers te laten telewerken en telewerken." Het is redelijk om te zien waarom. In plaats van huur te betalen voor een grote locatie in het centrum, kunnen bedrijven bijvoorbeeld kiezen voor een kleiner kantoor. Een kleinere ruimte betekent lagere kosten voor nutsvoorzieningen en apparatuur, en niet te vergeten minder benodigdheden voor de keuken en badkamer.

Saving money is good, but let’s look at productivity. A whopping 91% of respondents in one survey said they’re “more productive when working remotely." The survey examined answers from over 500 American employees, 58% of them were between the ages of 25 and 44, who work remotely. Adding to the evidence is a 2014 study that compared the productivity of office-based and home-based employees at Ctrip, a Chinese travel service provider. The results were impressive.

“People working from home completed 13.5% more calls than the staff in the office did," explains Nicholas Bloom, a professor and an organizer of the Ctrip study. To put that in context, “Ctrip got almost an extra workday a week out of them." It doesn’t end there. The same study found that Ctrip saved nearly $2,000 for each employee during the nine-month experiment. Plus, attrition rates for home workers “fell by over 50%."

The Benefit is Mutual

However, these benefits are often overshadowed by employee ones, which seem to be misunderstood. Some companies paint a vision of employees working in their pajamas, saving money on their attire and commute.

But what’s motivating for me, as an employee, is the autonomy to work where I like, instead of where someone else thinks I should work: in an open office with an endless number of visual and auditory distractions imposed upon me. It’s hard to get work done at work when phones buzz, people talk, and games chirp. Plus, it’s mentally exhausting to block out all these distractions, so when I can avoid them my productivity soars.

That’s why I see working remotely as a tool. It’s like having a company computer: both help me do my job better. Although I can write an article on a notepad, the entire researching, writing, and editing process is much more efficient and effective when I use my laptop. The same is true when it comes to remote working. It’s possible to write in a noisy open office, but I get far more quality writing done when I work remotely.

It’s not to say that offices need to go away entirely. In fact, there are benefits to going to the office for a few hours or even a couple of days each week, to work and collaborate with others. But employees should have a choice in the matter, and working remotely should be an option that’s readily available.

So instead of touting remote work as an employee “perk," it should be regarded as a workplace feature that enables employees to do great work. In the end, my company and employee both win. I, as an employee, work how and where I like, and my company reaps the results, since I get far more quality work done when I work in an environment that fits my needs.

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