Sharp learning curve for bosses as work from home goes global

Before the new coronavirus began spreading, just 2.9 per cent of the world's employees were working exclusively or mainly from home. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON (REUTERS) - Two weeks into the coronavirus lockdown and Mr Sergei Holmeckis, a boss at Deutsche Telekom's Czech operations in the city of Brno, was frustrated with staff video calls. His team did not like turning on their cameras and the discussion was stilted.

"I started to show them my cat," he said. "It showed the human side of me more and really changed the perception. It got people to switch on their cameras and be more engaged."

Such tactics obviously will not appeal to everyone. But they do show how the world's biggest experiment in working from home is forcing managers to reassess their methods - especially as surveys predict higher levels of remote working post-pandemic. Before the new coronavirus began spreading, just 2.9 per cent of the world's employees were working exclusively or mainly from home, according to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), a Geneva-based United Nations agency.

Within weeks, that figure exploded as social distancing forced companies to launch telework schemes. An Argentinian study found that 93 per cent of large firms had turned to telework; in Britain, half of all employers said that by late-April the bulk of their staff were working from home.

Surveys in the United States and Britain have shown over three-quarters of companies expect to offer more homeworking after the pandemic, with staff citing benefits such as greater work-life balance and claiming they felt just as productive as in the office.

Twitter was among the first to declare that working from home would be a permanent option, while the head of Barclays bank suggested that "putting 7,000 people in a building may be a thing of the past".

"This is a revolution here and we don't know what the end-result will be," said Mr Jon Messenger, an ILO expert on working conditions who has traced the history of telework since it first emerged in the mid-1970s with the label "telecommuting".

"Managers in the past have been very unwilling to do this because of the loss of direct control over subordinates... it requires a totally different approach to management."

Mr Messenger argues the new approach implies above all a shift towards greater results-based performance appraisal while allowing employees more scope to organise their work time.

But while various studies link so-called "time sovereignty" to productivity benefits, some companies find that hard to take on board. Developers of employee tracking software - which for example send managers screenshots of their staff's computer screens - are reporting a surge in sales. Companies where tasks are hard to quantify argue that some form of monitoring is essential.

But workplace experts warn that excessive surveillance can be counterproductive.

"Employers risk damaging the relationship if they are treating staff like children," Mr Ben Willmott, head of public policy for the CIPD body of human resources professionals.

The rise over the past decade of collaborative software has made teamwork from separate locations easier, but such tools still leave many employees with a sense of disconnect and lack of structure in their working lives.

"There is a risk of people disengaging. A lot of the conversations are operational, about tasks: low on empathy, low on personal support," said Mr Octavius Black, whose company Mind Gym offers workshops on remote management skills.

Assuming that lockdowns do not have to be reimposed to prevent a second wave of the virus, ILO's Mr Messenger suggests that telework will become more widespread but in a watered-down form - optional and not for the entire working week.

"The sweet spot is about two or three days a week," he said."Then you won't have so many of the downsides."

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