Cayenne Consulting

The Benefits and Risks of Telecommuting

Many companies boarded the telecommuting bandwagon in the early 2000s — and with screen-sharing technology and so many virtual meeting options, who can blame them? Employees loved telecommuting because it saved them time and money and gave them the flexibility they craved for things like doctors’ appointments, school pickups, and errands — although that last one probably wasn’t included in companies’ policies.

Telecommuting works great for self-motivated employees who can handle their responsibilities and treat telecommuting like the privilege it truly is. For other employees, it doesn’t work as well. But the pendulum can swing in the other direction too — many managers have no problem contacting employees for non-emergencies during off-hours or dumping extra work on them with the expectation that employees will comply to keep their telecommuting privileges.

There’s no question — telecommuting blurs the line between work and personal life. However, telecommuting has more than doubled in the past decade and continues to be a hot-button issue with both benefits and drawbacks.

Here are the many benefits your company can reap when you allow your employees to work from home:

However, keep the risks of telecommuting in mind:

Last year, IBM, one of the biggest influencers on telecommuting, tightened its telecommuting policy by requiring more than 2,600 off-site employees to reside in one of six designated cities or face termination. Yahoo, Best Buy, and Bank of America have also pulled remote workers back into offices in recent years. Some companies cite the better collaboration among employees; others that fell on hard times cite that they need workers in the office for an all-hands-on-deck approach.

Your company and its needs are unique. Make sure to find a happy medium and choose whichever telecommuting option is best for it.

Editor’s note: This post has not been updated to reflect the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. Telecommuting is obviously going to remain a major part of our lives in the coming years. The big unanswered question is when, and how much, companies mandate employees return to the office, and for how much of the work week. Stay tuned.

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