Quite suddenly and without warning, the COVID-19 pandemic has set the stage for the ultimate remote employee productivity experiment.
Before the pandemic, the US labor force consisted of roughly 164.6 million adults. Of these working adults, about 3.6 percent (or 5 million people) worked from home at least part-time. But in April of 2020, that number spiked to approximately 20 percent (that's more than 32.9 million people1, including some professionals who may be working from home full time for the first time).
Here are a set of key findings about working from home during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Based on these findings, we can safely say that the debate is no longer if employees are more productive when working from home; it’s about how to ensure improved productivity levels by putting the right procedures and supports in place.
1-Mental & Emotional Well-Being:
Fear and stress related to the health and financial impact of COVID-19 are likely to blame for nearly 42 percent of surveyed employees who admit that they have been less productive over the past two months8.
54 percent of HR leaders admit that poor technology and/or infrastructure for remote working is the No.1 challenge limiting productivity potential9.
3-Work-Life Balance
29 percent of remote workers struggle with work-life balance, which can lead to physical, mental, and emotional issues that impact productivity, absenteeism, and employee turnover10.
Due to speculations about a potential second-spike in COVID-19 cases, many organizations are choosing to play it safe and protect their human capital by mandating or extending work-from-home privileges.
But, even after the pandemic is over, Gartner predicts that 41% of employees will likely work from home at least part-time11.
To acclimate, 40 percent of organizations plan to increase spending on digital tools and software12.
But using technology to evolve into a more dynamic and agile workforce won’t be easy. Businesses will need to replace clunky legacy PSA software with robust, all-in-one solutions that offer numerous features and integrations. By aligning essential tools with other mission-critical systems, businesses can simplify the technology landscape, streamline activities across the organization, and better support employees and customers as everyone adjusts to this new way of working and living.
The bottom line is that people (and tech workers in particular) will be working from home more, so companies have to adapt to help their employees do their jobs as efficiently as possible from their remote locations.
How are you adjusting your internal procedures to accommodate long-term remote work?
References:
1-Statista 2-HR Drive 3-Rescue Time 4-Business News Daily 5-Gartner 6-Gallup 7-Buffer 8-Morning Consult 9-Gartner 10-Inc. 11-Gartner 12-TrustRadius