Why the future of work is already here
You get SH#T done
Shorter commutes, private office, flexible work hours.
This all leads to: less time wasted, more productive work hours and increased happiness amongst employees.
In 2013, Stanford University conducted a study by randomly assigning employees at a call center to work from home and others to work in the office for nine months. The result was a 13 percent performance increase by those working from home, of which 9 percent was from working more hours.
People criticize working remotely because they find it difficult to measure the number of hours their employees are working. What they forget is that going into the office does not equal productive work.
“Office workers are interrupted—or self-interrupted—roughly every three minutes.” — The Wall Street Journal
In fact, once thrown off, it can take over 23 minutes for a worker to retrieve focus on their original task.
Give people the freedom to work where they want, and begin to re-think the 9-5 working style. By adopting a culture of trust and respect, you’re empowering individuals to not just show up, but to show results.
Work and retain the best people
We hear it over and over again: Always hire the best people.
The company’s that embrace telecommuting have a significant advantage over those that haven’t figured it out. For each candidate that is available to work in your city, there are hundreds more around the world that can do it better and cheaper.
Hiring top talent is already hard enough as it is, why limit the single most important ingredient for the success of your business?
It’s inevitable that more and more skilled workers will adapt to a remote working lifestyle, and it’s the companies that can accommodate the lifestyles of these talents that will become the market leaders in the future.
Remote has never been easier
The good news is, it’s now easier than ever to coordinate the work of individuals from around the world. As long as we have access to a laptop and the internet, there are hundreds of tools that have been created to make the process seamless.
Now I’m not suggesting that it’s a walk in the park. There are setbacks to working remotely that is simply easier with in-person interactions, such as training, instant feedback, and relationship building. So here’s how to make that all work.
1. Think output
Focusing on a results-orientated system is the initial step to take when going remote. At the end of the day, the output that we produce is the only tangible result we can present that brings the business forward.
I’m a huge fan of focusing on output because it forces me to prioritize my focus to tasks that will have the biggest impact, and helps me stay productive.
- Person A takes 5 hours to complete a project, and Person B takes 30 minutes to complete the same project.
- Person A comes in early and stays late at the office, while Person B can leave the office earlier to recharge or plan new projects that will bring value for the company. Yet Person A is rewarded for their “hard work” and dedication, when Person B has accomplished the same outputs, if not more from being productive.
co-workers.
Sometimes we get so ingrained about our own tasks, that we forget what’s happening with the rest of our team members.
留言
張貼留言