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Teleworking: The myth of working from home

2014-09-05 11:01:10

By Margaret Ryan BBC News

Yahoo has banned its staff from "remote" working. After years of many

predicting working from home as the future for everybody, why is it not the

norm?

When a memo from human resources dropped into the inbox of Yahoo staff banning

them from working from home it prompted anger from many of its recipients.

"Some of the best decisions and insights come from hallway and cafeteria

discussions, meeting new people, and impromptu team meetings," the memo said.

"Speed and quality are often sacrificed when we work from home."

The move to get staff back into the office from June this year is thought to

have been driven by new chief executive Marissa Mayer, who herself returned to

work weeks after giving birth.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

How many people telecommute at Google? Our answer is: As few as possible

Google chief finance officer Patrick Pichette

Virgin entrepreneur Richard Branson, who spends much of his time working on

Necker Island in the Caribbean, was quick to respond, calling it a "backwards

step in an age when remote working is easier and more effective than ever".

People in the West are constantly bombarded by news about technology that makes

it easier to communicate with the office. Many have fast broadband and webcams

that allow their faces to appear through the ether at any important meetings.

They are surrounded by smartphones, laptops and tablets.

Everything is surely there to free them from the daily commute. Those in

manufacturing or retail might always have to be present, but in an age when so

many work in offices, why can't they have their office space at home?

There are signs that the number of people working from home is on the increase

in the UK, according to the CBI. A total of 59% of employers who responded to a

survey in 2011 were offering teleworking, up from 13% in 2006.

In the US, 24% of employed people report working from home at least some hours

each week, according to the Bureau of Labour Statistics.

But only 2.5% of the workforce (3.1 million people, not including the self

employed or unpaid volunteers) consider home their primary place of work, says

the Telework Research Network.

Yahoo is not a lone voice in espousing the virtues of physically being in the

office.

Only last week Google's chief financial officer Patrick Pichette said when the

company is asked how many people telecommute, their answer is "as few as

possible".

"There is something magical about sharing meals," Pichette explained. "There is

something magical about spending the time together, about noodling on ideas,

about asking at the computer 'What do you think of this?'"

Google workers are provided with a free wifi-enabled bus in to the HQ. Mayer,

of course, is a former Google executive.

There are obvious reasons why working from home has not proliferated in the way

people thought it might. There is still ingrained cultural antipathy.

Designers at Google HQ Google, like Yahoo, prefers its workers in the office

Not "being seen in the office" may affect a person's chances of promotion,

result in a smaller pay rise than office-based peers and lower performance

evaluations, according to research by the London Business School and the

University of California.

They stress the continuing importance of so-called "passive face time" that is

being in the office, regardless of what someone is doing.

Continue reading the main story

Face time from afar

A London Business School/University of California study found remote workers

may get smaller pay rises and fewer promotions. These tactics may help:

regular phone or email status reports, especially first thing or end of the day

being extra-visible when in the office

responding immediately to emails

The additional pressure not to be perceived as "skiving" may drive those who do

work from home to exceed their hours.

Prof Jennifer Glass, co-author of a report on the US workforce published by the

University of Texas at Austin, says for many people, especially those in their

30s and 40s, teleworking is part of their work after they have already done 40

hours in the office.

Glass was "flabbergasted" by the Yahoo memo. "This seems to be trying to bring

Yahoo in line with corporate America, not high-tech industries," she says.

"The idea that this is going to promote more innovation seems bizarre."

Promoting the value of interactions in hallways and canteen seems strange at a

time when face-to-face contact within the office is decreasing.

"I frequently email someone without getting up to see if they are there," Glass

notes.

Managers can be biased in favour of those they can actually see working.

"There is this attitude that managers need to see people are close by and that

those workers are more productive," says Glass. "It is a natural tendency to

want to control things."

Commuters head to work on bikes and on foot One perk of teleworking is no more

commuting

This seems outdated to many. "The best employers don't overlook staff because

they are not in the office. That strikes me as yesterday's way of working,"

says Paul Sellers, policy adviser at UK trade union umbrella group the TUC.

Dame Stephanie Shirley, who pioneered home working in the computer industry in

the early 1960s, says the concept has not taken off in quite the way many

predicted at the time.

"Academics were predicting it would become more acceptable. Town planners were

starting to incorporate the idea of home working into their designs. It felt

like the beginning of a different kind of society."

Continue reading the main story

Extracts of the leaked memo

Yahoo HQ

To become the absolute best place to work, communication and collaboration will

be important, so we need to be working side-by-side.

Speed and quality are often sacrificed when we work from home. We need to be

one Yahoo!, and that starts with physically being together.

Being a Yahoo isn't just about your day-to-day job, it is about the

interactions and experiences that are only possible in our offices.

And, for the rest of us who occasionally have to stay home for the cable guy,

please use your best judgment in the spirit of collaboration.

Read the full memo

When she started her company F International in 1962, the idea of people

working from home was alien to most businesses. Offices were highly regimented.

Some of the company's programmers did not even have home telephones.

Workers were used to signing in and having their output closely supervised. "It

was about the time you were present, rather than what you had achieved," says

Dame Stephanie.

By the mid-1980s F International was a pioneer of teleworking employing 800

home workers and turning over nearly 20m a year, and was setting up a national

electronic mail network to link workers' home computers to the company's

minimal headquarters.

Dame Stephanie said she was on a "crusade" to find skilled work for women who

had left the workplace to start families or look after relatives.

But social changes can take longer than expected, says the 75-year-old, who

quit the industry in 1993.

Decades later the issue has not gone away. Working from home still has its

image problem.

London Mayor Boris Johnson once joked: 'We all know that is basically sitting

wondering whether to go down to the fridge to hack off that bit of cheese

before checking your emails again."

For Alan Denbigh, co-author of The Teleworking Handbook and former executive

director of the Telework Association, there are proven benefits of home

working. "It gives you the opportunity to get on with a particular project and

for those who are bringing up small families where it is imperative to have a

degree of flexibility it works."

Having done both he does not recommend working from home exclusively,

recognising the benefits of interacting with people in the office and the

pitfalls of working long hours at home to keep up.

But he says it is "equally ridiculous" to feel you have to be at the office

every day. He recommends a bit of both.

"A large corporation saying you can't work at home, especially an IT based

company, seems counter-productive. You have to treat people as grown-ups."

I worked in an office with my company before moving to the States where I

initially worked exclusively from home. At first, I loved being at home, to

have the comforts (indeed the fridge) and the freedom to wear whatever I

wanted. The idea that you do nothing is nonsense - as the article points out, I

would put in extra hours to avoid the label of 'skiver'. However, after a while

I did miss the interaction with colleagues and also instant answers. By that I

mean you can confer with peers for an immediate decision rather than wait for a

reply to an email. Now I've moved into an office and will have 1 or 2 days a

week at home, I feel I am more motivated as it breaks up the monotony of the

same surroundings all day every day. We are all adults and if you abuse the

trust by sitting watching TV all day then of course there will be problems but

you should have the discipline to carry on with your work no matter where you

are. I totally agree with Alan Denbigh: a bit of both is the ideal solution.

Max, Ware, Hertfordshire / San Francisco, California

Not only do I work from home....but I work from home in France. I believe that

my clients who are based in the UK benefit far more than when I managed their

accounts from a busy office in London. They have my focused attention, I have

far less distractions from co-workers, etc...it's just me and the buck stops

with me!! My clients would soon see if I wasn't delivering. I am more flexible

with time and availability, I often work longer hours and my rates are far more

competitive than when I worked agency side.

Delia Bourne, France

I've been working from home, full-time, for someone else for eight years and

more. With an office at the bottom of the garden, my greatest problem is the

isolation: I don't even have the pleasure of turning away hawkers at the front

door any more. When I'm busy, I may not get out for days on end, and there's no

natural point at which to go home, because you are home. I would much prefer to

be in an office with people, provided I could, sometimes, close a door to get

on with things.

Hugh, Coventry

As a home worker for a company that has closed several offices as a result of a

major restructure, I feel the problem here is with management techniques and

not with employee activity. My company, which has a number of offices around

the UK, makes good technological provision for communications between workers

who may be at opposite ends of the country. My job as a bid writer means I

welcome the lack of interruptions and ability to concentrate that comes from

home working. Rather than move back an evolutionary step by forcing all

employees back into the workplace, why not bring management techniques up to

date by requiring managers to undergo training in effective management of the

remote workforce? Learning to balance good communication with 'hounding',

developing a team spirit among widely disbursed workers, balancing workloads,

maintaining separation between work and home life etc. could all be ingredients

in the training.

Lisa Thiel, Leeds

In corporate life my employer at the time pioneered home working and allowed it

from the mid 80's. Nowadays, I run my business from an office at home. It

requires some discipline and does not suit everyone. Face to face meetings are

still valuable. It's appropriate to some kinds of work but not everything. Some

people prefer the clear physical distinction between work and home life, others

don't seem to need that. I'm surprised at this policy from a supposedly hi-tech

business such as Yahoo. It seems to me to be a retrograde step.

Ken Smith, London

Interaction with other is staff is, of course, potentially healthy and

productive. However, for every positive interaction, there are probably four

others which are time-sapping, peripheral to the task, tiring, and just plain

irritating. And let's remember the time taken by office staff to sit hidden

deep in their cube farms and catch up on social networking. Where did this myth

of productivity come from? The Yahoo lady sees only one aspect of office life.

It does not consist of sitting around with a latte, coming up with solutions to

invincible profitability and world peace. Much appears to be in the age-old

corporate pursuit of "presenteeism", that is, unproductive "being-there-ness".

Yes, I have a bias. I've home-worked since 1985, apart from a short period

circa 1997, when was forced to present myself at an office regularly in order

to...errm..present myself at an office regularly. I did thoroughly enjoyed that

time, but had to catch up on meeting-free, interruption-free,

boss-snooping-free REAL work when I got home. It was all jolly good fun, but I

was staggered how much time folks wasted. Was this "real" corporate life? And I

inhabited an unreal world of concentration and productivity? Why was I seen as

the odd one out? However, homeworking can be slow-motion career suicide. I

don't care. Bring it on. I've seen my children grow up, been involved in

community life, nurtured my marriage at unusual times of the day. We all face a

fork in our own career road. What really matters to us? Corporate life is not a

safe place to invest. Life and family is. Has anyone, at the end of their life,

said "I wish I'd spent more time at the office".

Rob Govier, Eaglescliffe

I think this article portrays a false choice; home working and being co-located

in an office both offer advantages. What doesn't work is a rigid policy of one

or the other. There are instances of employers offering 'home working' as a way

of reducing their overheads by not having to provide desk space, desks, chairs,

heating, lighting etc. When this is the primary driver and the advantages of

shared ideas, discussions, efficiency arising from being 'on-hand' are

overlooked, then home working is a bad thing. If, on the other hand, it enables

flexibility to employees in an era when more is expected of individuals and

lives are very busy, then it's a good thing. Both work methods are valid but

rigidly saying it's one or the other is the pathway to failure.

Ian Bartlett, Chesham

My husband & I both work from home - it's a nightmare! I have teenage kids

which technically should make it easier but they forget stuff & assume that

because we're at home we can drop it into school. Then when they get home we

have to get involved in every dilemma. Facebook calls me A LOT of the time as

does the dishwasher/washing/ironing etc. Time with my husband is no fun as we

just have work life & home life to talk about. That said I LOVE that I can meet

up with my friends whenever & go for sneaky breakfasts with my husband!

Fiona B, Southampton

Going into my office is often a waste of time -- I'm interrupted almost

constantly, and people often stand right behind my desk and have loud

conversations, oblivious to the damage they do to their co-worker's

productivity. As a software developer whose work requires intense concentration

-- with management's typical move towards open offices, sometimes without even

partitions -- I find that my productivity is significantly higher when at home,

where I control my environment and my schedule. Yes, sometimes I go and take a

break in the sunshine, but I also sometimes do a burst of work at 10pm. I'm

sure writers and others who require long periods of concentration would agree.

Ichiro Furusato, New Zealand

I think we could easily combine working from home and the office, to have the

option of both would be a great advantage and would make us more productive.

Wouldn't you want to keep a job that gave you this flexibility.

Rowan Schooling, London

Why do most people not work from home? Well it might be that most people do

jobs that require a presence....teacher, nurse, doctor, receptionist, dustman,

shop assistant, gas engineer, plumber, bank worker to name but a few. Or do you

not consider that "work"? The number of people who work at a screen in an

office is small by comparison. Home working is for the privileged few.

Eleanor London, Berkshire

You don't say anything in this article about how home working can be an

essential asset to those with mobility issues or other disabilities. I am

currently on a split week as my commute is too painful to do everyday. Luckily

this should be a short term (less than 6 months) solution for me but I have had

to do this in the past and predict I will again, and I am sure there are many

for whom this is the only way they can work.

Lucy Bannister, London

I work in local government; many of us have been 'forced' to work from home as

offices have closed and greater numbers of staff are shoehorned into ever

smaller amounts of office space as part of this Government's obsession with

cost cutting. In theory, it's a good idea I suppose but unless the organisation

you work for kits both you and its IT section out with the tools to allow you

to work from home properly, I've found it can be very, very frustrating!

Andy, Preston

I worked from home 3 days a week in my last PAYE job. Now I work 100% from home

as a freelancer. The difference between working from home and at the office was

simple. Day in office - Stagger in after 2 hour commute. Gossip and moan with

colleagues, try to work but fail to do so due to hot desking problems and noise

in open plan office. Give up after required hours, commute 2 hours home. Cry

with exhaustion and feelings of failure. Day at home - Get up, boot up PC,

start work. Plough through work mountain with clarity & drive. Realise it's

midday and I'm still in my nightie. Get dressed, eat, start washing machine. 10

minute chat with colleagues online. Return to work mountain. Finish work

mountain by 17:00. Spend evening reasonably awake and happy with life.

Natalie, Essex

What is it with this notion that everybody works in an office! I work in

radiation safety on nuclear submarines and there isn't any working from home!

For those that can it's a decent idea, but please BBC, try to remember that for

many millions of people it's not an option.

ajl655, Plymouth

Why is it that every journalist has to include the sentence "who herself

returned to work weeks after giving birth" whenever Marissa Meyer is mentioned?

Would you add this if you were talking about a male CEO? Surely in this age of

alleged equality, mothers have the same right as fathers to choose how much

leave they want to take after the birth of their baby, and they have the right

to do so without being judged. There are very few articles about Marissa Meyer

nowadays that don't mention this fact, as if it is now an inextricable part of

her personality. I find it very irritating.

Eleanor, Hamburg, Germany

I work for the public health team in Brighton and Hove and lead on physical

activity. Physical inactivity is a major public health concern as it is a risk

factor for a number of serious health problems including diabetes, CVD, some

cancers, and obesity. Working from home takes away opportunites to be active.

For example the journey to and from work is a chance for people to build

physical activity into their daily routines by leaving the car at home and

walking, cycling, jogging etc Even people who take public transport are more

active than those who drive as they generally have to walk some distance to the

stop or station. A growing number of employers are recognisiong the benefits to

productivity and reductions in sickness absence a more active workforce can

bring and so are supporting activity during the working day by facilitating

sport and physical activity sessions. At Brighton and Hove City Council staff

can take part in lunchtime health walks and badminton sessions, and after work

volleyball. These are great opportunites to be active and to build social

networks. I feel that your photos of people working from home in pyjamas,

relaxing and generally being very sedentary will be the case for the majority

of those choosing home working.

David Brindley, Brighton

Who are you selling this article to? It is absolutely unbelievable that the BBC

are so far from its audience. I go to work every day to an environment where

presence is required, expected and monitored. And like most of my fellow

workers I am still very used to signing in and having my output closely

supervised. Do you not understand how the rest of British society lives? What's

more, this practice has only become greater in the past five years or so, not

less since the 60s. Where do people get to feel that its "equally ridiculous"

to feel you have to be at the office every day. Such a shame for those of you

who feel that working from home should be part of everyone's life. I say you

should get a life, and look at the real people who are out there, working, not

worrying about or demanding that they work from home. Wise up, the country's

corporate businesses do not allow this, only managers might get the odd day

working from home. So it seems to me that your feature about working from home

is only directed towards those in management. I say BBC should seriously look

at who is reading their news. So annoyed, can you tell?

Cath Cochrane, Leeds