Original Post: Working at Home and Workplace Productivity
SELECTED AND POSTED BY ASHUTOSH JOSHI from
www.dailywritingtips.com
The recent news that Yahoo CEO
Marissa Mayer is banning employees from working at home has caused a flurry
of commentary in the media and among workers in the Internet industry. One
aspect of the issue is how such a decision affects content producers.
Banning telecommuting is a
heavy-handed strategy. The rationale for the policy change, according to a
leaked Yahoo memo, is that the company needs employees to be available to
collaborate with colleagues in person, but the irony in this statement from
an Internet company is delicious.
Commentators have debated the
wisdom of Yahoo’s approach, some arguing that telecommuting encourages
slacking and others insisting that it boosts productivity. The truth, as is
often the case, is somewhere in between.
At my last job before my current
freelancing stint, I worked for a company that allowed most employees to work
from home one day a week — until management decided that it wasn’t working
out. The implicit reason was that some people were abusing the privilege,
staying home and not getting much work done. In my case, what had been my
most productive workday became just like any other, punctuated with
interruptions and distractions and noisy coworkers.
Fortunately, the privilege was
reinstated after a while, during which interval managers presumably were
encouraged to keep closer tabs on the employees who reported to them. It is
this point that any company considering whether to introduce or retain
telecommuting should keep in mind: Some employees will game the system
whether they’re working on site or at home. Also, it’s disingenuous to use
the excuse about the necessity of working in physical proximity with
colleagues when much of one’s work is solitary or involves communication with
people at other company locations or other businesses.
There’s also another issue, one
that makes this topic relevant to a site called Daily Writing Tips. Many
employees do a significant amount of writing or editing even if their
employer is not a publishing or communications company, and telecommuting
gives them an opportunity to produce content in an environment with fewer
distractions than the workplace offers.
I have worked at several companies
where coworkers whose responsibilities entailed little or no composing of
content played music, talked loudly or incessantly, and otherwise made it
difficult for me to do what I was being paid to do. If this predicament
sounds familiar to you, and even minimal telecommuting is not part of company
policy, consider these possibilities:
1. Ask your manager to try to accommodate your need to work with minimal
distractions, if only occasionally. If you cannot be relocated to a quieter
workspace, perhaps you can at least sit somewhere else — a vacant office, a
seldom-used conference room — from time to time, as when you need to draft an
important report or produce some other significant amount of text.
2. Request the option to work on an offset schedule (starting very early in the morning or ending later at night) so that you have a couple of hours at the beginning or end of the day during which few, if any, other people are in your work area. 3. Ask your manager to monitor noise in the work area and follow up with reminders to employees to minimize sounds and distractions, including telephone conversations — and ask him or her to ban use of phones’ speaker functions. (And if people are allowed to listen to music at their desks, ask that they be required to use headphones.) Supervisors who have their own offices are often unaware of excessive noise (especially when certain workers suddenly become subdued and intent on their work when a manager appears), and they may need to be nudged to address the problem. 4. Suggest a policy that any conversation that takes more than a moment must take place in a meeting room or another area, because trying to write while the person seated next to you discusses a job-related problem (or a recent vacation) with a visiting colleague for half an hour is half an hour of your workday wasted. 5. Ask to be allowed to telecommute one or two days a week on a trial basis, suggesting that you and your manager agree on baseline productivity expectations. If your request is granted, make sure that you significantly exceed those benchmarks.
You may hesitate to make such
suggestions, concerned that you will be viewed as a troublemaker, but
emphasize the improved productivity and morale that will result for all, not
just for you, if such policies are implemented. Your success, of course, will
also depend on your manager’s competence and on the company culture.
Consider, too, asking for support
from your colleagues (most, if not all, of whom are likely to sympathize and
to agree that a quieter work environment would be beneficial). Finally, determine
to go to your manager’s superior or to your company’s human resources
director if your immediate supervisor does not resolve the issue.
Original Post: Working at
Home and Workplace Productivity
Your eBook: Click here to download the Basic English Grammar ebook. |
Shreepad Management Blog will have details of management subjects,Soft skills subjects etc. Writer&Editor - Ashutosh Joshi
Monday, March 4, 2013
Working at Home and Workplace Productivity
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment