Work-From-Home is Here to Stay: Call for Flexibility in Post-Pandemic
Work Policies
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2203.11136v1
- Date: Mon, 21 Mar 2022 17:11:20 GMT
- Title: Work-From-Home is Here to Stay: Call for Flexibility in Post-Pandemic
Work Policies
- Authors: Darja Smite, Nils Brede Moe, Jarle Hildrum, Javier Gonzalez Huerta,
Daniel Mendez
- Abstract summary: Covid-19 pandemic forced employees in tech companies worldwide to abruptly transition from working in offices to working from their homes.
Many companies are currently experimenting with new work policies that balance employee- and manager expectations.
- Score: 4.409836695738518
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: In early 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic forced employees in tech companies
worldwide to abruptly transition from working in offices to working from their
homes. During two years of predominantly working from home, employees and
managers alike formed expectations about what post-pandemic working life should
look like. Many companies are currently experimenting with new work policies
that balance both employee- and manager expectations to where, when and how
work should be done in the future. In this article, we gather experiences from
17 companies and their sites, covering 12 countries. We share the results of
corporate surveys of employee preferences for working from home and analyse new
work policies. Our results are threefold. First, through the new work policies
all companies are formally giving more flexibility to the employees with
regards to working time and work location. Second, there is a great variation
in how much flexibility the companies are willing to yield to the employees.
The variation is related both to industry type, size of the companies, and
company culture. Third, we document a change in the psychological contract
between employees and managers, where the option of working from home is
converted from an exclusive perk that managers could choose to give to the few,
to a core privilege that all employees feel they are entitled to. Finally,
there are indications that as the companies learn and solicit feedback
regarding the efficiency of the chosen strategies, we might see further
developments and changes of the work policies with respect to how much
flexibility to work whenever and from anywhere they grant. Through these
findings, the paper contributes to a growing literature about the new trends
emerging from the pandemic in tech companies and spells out practical
implications onwards.
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