Teleworking &Working from Home
No comments
Find out about the pros and cons of a new way of working. Are these options you could consider?
Generally speaking, teleworking is where some or all of the work you do for someone else is carried out in your home. Advances in technology have meant that many jobs that, up until now, were tied to office buildings, can just as easily (sometimes more easily) be undertaken by people working from their own home offices. British Telecom reckons that there are about two million people working at home and that more than a quarter of them are teleworkers.
Although theres no official definition of teleworking, its usually agreed that it means using modern technology to help you work from home.
No set patterns define the teleworking arrangement between employer and employees. Circumstances vary, depending on the nature of the job and the functions of the company. What is clear is that, if it is properly thought through, teleworking can benefit workers and employers alike, and even have a positive social effect.
Benefits for employers
Savings on office space
Improved productivity some surveys suggest that people working from home are up to 30 per cent more efficient than their office-based colleagues
Retaining trained staff who might have had to leave because of a change in their circumstances, for example, if their partner had to move because of their job or if one of their family needs to be looked after for a period of time
Benefits for employees
Less time spent commuting, so less stress and more time available for other activities
Possibility to arrange work to suit individual working patterns or life choices
Flexibility to cope with sudden emergencies
Social benefits
Teleworking means fewer commuters, so fewer cars on the road, so less traffic and less pollution
People who work from home are in a better position to join in with local activities and so help build community networks













Comments