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One Third of Telcom Staff More Productive Working From Home

Qedward writes "British telecoms operator O2 has found that 88% of its staff are just as productive working remotely, while one-third claimed that they actually got more work done when they worked from home. 3,000 employees at O2's head office took part in a program that had them to work from home for one day, as practice for problems that may occur during the Olympic Games. From the article: '“The success of O2’s experiment extends much further than just allowing some of the workforce to stay at home and work. It proves that with the right thinking and planning, even the largest organizations can protect themselves from the most severe disruptions to their business,” said Ben Dowd, business director at O2.'"

17 of 109 comments (clear)

  1. "Telecommuting" still taboo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Managers badmouth telecommuting because it more or less proves what we've known all along. Most managers are useless, redundant, wastes of space that spend more time putting on a show to justify their own existence than they do conducting actual management.

    1. Re:"Telecommuting" still taboo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Managers do serve some purpose. Where I work we haven't had one for over a year now - resulting in us having to put up with all of the political bullshit that goes on in the organisation and also getting rail-roaded despite objections to the idiotic ideas coming down from the Cxx types. Managers also sign off on budgets, performance reviews, salary reviews, etc., so guess what else hasn't been happening? Pretty soon our organisation will come down to give us more work and find nobody there because we're all slowly getting jobs elsewhere.

    2. Re:"Telecommuting" still taboo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's why I said most. You need one good manager. Not 10 bad ones.
      I stand by my statement that /most/ managers in American business culture are redundant.

      Unfortunately bad management is often a self-perpetuating malignancy. Those with power aren't going to eliminate their own positions under any circumstances.

      Unfortunately I envision the future of American business as feedback loop of middle managers, un-trackable N'th layer outsource subcontracts, and HR departments. Eventually the last actual producer will be eliminated, and all companies will suddenly collapse as they unknowingly try to subcontract services, supplies, and products from themselves.

    3. Re:"Telecommuting" still taboo by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 5, Interesting

      They're not all totally useless. I accidentally became one for a while and didn't realize it until a friend pointed it out. I griped that I'd been busting my ass all week juggling work schedules, project priorities, placating clients, liaising between subcontractors and government agencies, ensuring that my group had enough work to keep them busy, handling exceptions, training, etc. but I hadn't produced anything. "Dude, you're a manger."

      A good manager does the annoying crap that's necessary to keep his/her group running smoothly.

    4. Re:"Telecommuting" still taboo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      A manger!? Here!? We don't take too kindly to your types around here...

  2. Re:Keep the pjs on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    None of my hot girlfriends have ever had problems with me being nude around them

    That's because your sample size is zero.

  3. One whole day. by The+Living+Fractal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, what is one day? The novelty of working from home would wear off after about a week and then what? I know what. You'd find me 'working' in my underwear, covered in fried chicken with several empty margarita glasses about me. My e-mails would show a very noticeable trend in typos from about noon onward...

    --
    I do not respond to cowards. Especially anonymous ones.
  4. Reduces pollution too by cpu6502 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Keeping workers at home saves ~10 gallons of gas per person per week. Which is 200 fewer pounds per person per week of CO2.

    --
    My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    1. Re:Reduces pollution too by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 4, Informative

      From Wikipedia: 2 C8H18 + 25 O2 -> 16 CO2 + 18 H2O
      Carbon is about 12 standard atomic weights, hydrogen about 1 and oxygen about 16, so 228 atomic weights of gasoline and 800 atomic weights of oxygen results in 704 atomic weights of CO2 and 324 atomic weights of water. Sounds about right to me when you take into account a few additives to the gasoline.

      (IAMNAC)

  5. Re:Keep the pjs on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wear clothes instead of turning the heating on. I may be poor....

  6. Companies are starting to listen by wynterwynd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I work in first-line management for a major telecom and this idea is really starting to take hold. And it's everything I imagined it would be.

    If you aren't directly managing employees and/or it isn't necessary for you to have physical access to equipment, there is no reason why working from home won't work. My boss and all my team are scattered all over the country, we've never met each other face to face. All my meetings are over the phone and via web conference. Nothing requires that I be anywhere near an office, just that I have a quiet place with telephone and high-speed internet access.

    We recently switched to allowing telecommuting 2-3 days a week. And let me tell you, it is Glorious. Those 2-3 days are the most productive ones I have, maybe because I'm comfortable and able to clearly think through issues, instead of being constantly interrupted by the asshole across the cube farm's ringtone or the loudmouth Sales guy on a call next cube over or a million other irritations at the office. And as far as the time-worn fears of slacking are concerned, honestly I have too much to do to slack off - any supervising manager would be able to tell pretty quickly whether or not their subordinates are abusing the privilege.

    Now, this clearly won't work for everyone for obvious reasons - IT support staff, hardware maintenance, client/customer support, supervising managers; you can't really cash in on this goodness. But if you don't deal with face-to-face interactions and your work is mostly conducted electronically, there's no reason not to - that is, as long as you can easily get to the office should the need come up or should your environment prove disruptive.

    Some people do abuse the shit out of it - I wanted to strangle the lady who was watching her kids while hosting a call; the kid was yelling and she was goo-goo talking to him and it was just grossly unprofessional. But most people who've been working from home have been extremely professional about it - in fact I usually never know who's at home and who's in the office.

    I'm glad to see stories like this - telecommuting has taken tons of stress/aggravation out of my work week and it's had an unfair reputation pinned to it by traditional managers who think it's just too good to be true.

    --
    "Not all who wander are lost" -- JRR Tolkien
    1. Re:Companies are starting to listen by Kjella · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you aren't directly managing employees and/or it isn't necessary for you to have physical access to equipment, there is no reason why working from home won't work.

      If the people you're supposed to manage aren't at the office either, it hardly matters.

      And as far as the time-worn fears of slacking are concerned, honestly I have too much to do to slack off - any supervising manager would be able to tell pretty quickly whether or not their subordinates are abusing the privilege.

      Just wait until there's a quiet period, you'd be surprised how quickly you get used to not working a full day and/or being able to do everything else in between work. Sure if I was grossly slacking my manager would notice but I've never had a boss yet who knew exactly how hard the assignment he gave me was and even if he did, there's a good variance on whether I've done something similar/exactly like this before and any ad hoc issues that might turn up. Hell, even the same person in the same job changes over time when new versions come that make everything easier or harder. Maybe if I was consistently on the poorer side of his estimates over time, but I'd just as easily wager his expectations would be lowered instead. The effect is less if you're at the office during business hours whether there's much work or not.

      Also there's another effect I've seen, it's cramming as much work as possible into your working days which obviously impacts quality to do as little as possible during your days at home, sending out yesterday's work as today's. The derogatory term for it here in Norway is "gjemmekontor" instead of "hjemmekontor" - literally translated "hiding office" instead of "home office". Oh sure they usually can't be completely unreachable as that would give it away but they're always conveniently running a quick errand or was putting on a washing machine or some other reason for not answering right away. Of course people do some minor personal stuff at work too, but not all day long. Okay so people don't do it during crunch time but it's a way to get "days off" without taking the financial penalty during normal times.

      You don't have to be a slacker to see how the slackers exploit the system. Some people are simply there that they want to deliver an adequate to below average work performance knowing they get an okay pay with a minimum of effort and yet aren't so horrible they'll get fired. And if they put that cleverness into doing their jobs instead of working the system, they'd be very good employees but they don't find there's enough incentive. It's actually very hard to find out whether your employees are really working their best or not. Of course slackers slack at work too, but it's not that enticing there.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  7. Re:Keep the pjs on? by mark-t · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How about because one has a significant other who actually dislikes always having the blinds closed?

  8. Why working at home is both awesome and horrible by toygeek · · Score: 4, Funny

    http://theoatmeal.com/comics/working_home

    All that being said, I work for a virtual call center at home doing tech support for n00bs and the like and I really like it.

  9. Re:Keep the pjs on? by mark-t · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... or a young and playful pet cat thinking that one's dangley bits look like cool toys and lunge for them while one is standing at the kitchen counter making one's own breakfast.

    For reference, speaking from experience here, it's approximately as uncomfortable as it sounds.... and also something that one's significant other is liable to keep laughing at you over for about a week.

  10. Re:Keep the pjs on? by cpu6502 · · Score: 4, Informative

    See the Seinfeld episode about "good naked" versus "bad naked".

    --
    My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
  11. Somehwat BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I took a few weeks working from home, leading up to my wife giving birth to our second child. I'm a Staff Software Engineer for a large company, w/ 10 years experience. _I_ was far more productive in those weeks. But my overall productivity? Well, I sure as shit didn't help the new folks out, nearly as much as when I was actually in the office. So yes, local productivity (AKA me) improved. Global productivity, however, is arguable.