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Even After the Pandemic, 43% Say They'll Want to Work Remotely More Often (cnbc.com) 64

Long-time Slashdot reader gollum123 quotes CNBC: Nearly 43% of full-time American employees say they want to work remotely more often even after the economy has reopened, according to a survey released by business publishing company getAbstract. Of the more than 1,200 employees surveyed between April 16 and April 17, nearly 20% said their employer is actively discussing how they can make remote work more of an option in the future...

Andrew Savikas, chief strategy officer at getAbstract, says one of the biggest reasons why employees prefer to work remotely is because they get to save time on their daily commute. On average, Americans spent roughly 27 minutes on their one-way commute to work in 2018, according to the Census Bureau. This equates to over 200 hours spent commuting per year... "People like having that time back," Savikas says, while adding that employees also like the flexibility of working remotely because they can "structure the day how they want."

According to a joint CNBC/Change Research survey of more than 5,000 voters in swing states, 47% said the time they would normally spend on commuting has now been used to spend more time with their family. The survey, which gathered responses between April 17 and April 18, also found that employees have been spending the time they save on their commute to sleep more, focus on various hobbies and get more work done.

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Even After the Pandemic, 43% Say They'll Want to Work Remotely More Often

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  • Absolutely (Score:5, Interesting)

    by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Sunday May 10, 2020 @10:43AM (#60044016) Journal

    My organization's ancient, creaky leadership which still prints out emails and highlights them was very much against remote work prior to this. Now they're looking at the same amount of work being done and questioning why they're paying so much for facilities.

    I've always wanted more remote work, along with most of my coworkers. I think we're actually going to get it after this. Our leadership is in the high risk group for dying from COVID-19, so they are very much not interested in going back into our giant office building anytime soon. I'm hoping that their selfish self-preservation is what tips us into a much more permissive remote work policy when (and if?) we go back to the building.

    • But the headline is backwards.

      It should read "Even After the Pandemic, 57% Say They DON'T Want to Work Remotely More Often".

      • Why? This isn't a vote. It's a discussion of people who have discovered the advantages that can have on a regular basis. The fact that a portion of people have not is irrelevant to the story at hand.

      • I don't have a strong preference. I commute about 90 minutes a day, but my desk at work is nicer and quieter. Also the cafeteria cooks better than I can in the time available for lunch. But I save money on lunch and gas.

        I think my preference depends on if my family has been locked in for 2 months or not.

      • by Calydor ( 739835 )

        No, it should say that 57% either don't want to work remotely OR don't really care either way.

      • How many of that 57% have young kids? I know my sister and brother-in-law have a hard time with their 6 and 4 year olds running around the house while they are trying to work from home. I sure more people would prefer working from home if their kids were still going to school.
  • According to a CFO survey conducted in April by Gartner [gartner.com], 74% of respondents indicated a willingness to shift at least 5% of their formerly-onsite-only positions to telework.

    The times, they are a-changin'.

  • It's like a raise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday May 10, 2020 @10:53AM (#60044046)
    Between gas, car maintenance and increased rent from having to live where the work is being a work from home employee is a substantial raise for me.
    • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Sunday May 10, 2020 @10:58AM (#60044060)

      if more companies committed to letting people work remotely, it would help balance out the entropy in the housing market.

      I don't love paying $1M for a house just because I want choice in employment, in my field.

      let me move to somewhere cheaper and keep my job - and I'll even take a pay cut. we'll both win.

      lets see if companies finally admit they were wrong, all along, by forcing the open-office and being 'at work' all the time.

      • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

        if more companies committed to letting people work remotely, it would help balance out the entropy in the housing market.

        Entropy?

        I don't think that word means what you think it means.

        Unless maybe the housing market is releasing waste heat to the environment?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I work for the California state govt. (that agency that processes unemployment claims) and "face time" is still highly favored.

      I have actually had more productivity working from home because it's been harder to separate quitting time from home time as I just keep working, and I'm not limited to commuter times where I have to quit and try to pick up later. I catch a commuter bus or train, and it takes me 1 - 1.5 hours EACH WAY, every day. And I would LOVE to gain back 10 hours (or 15 hours - see below) a w

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Sunday May 10, 2020 @11:09AM (#60044086) Journal

    "Even After the Pandemic, 43% Say They'll Want to Work Remotely More Often"

    Oh honey, I've set foot in my last office building, period. I worked a lot of remote stuff previously but from now on it'll be 100%.

    No, I am not going to get up, shave, shower, get dressed, drive to an office, and sit there all day working. Not gonna happen. Fact is, I'm no longer comfortable doing that until there's a vaccine or everyone's been tested.

    I've no doubt I could get a note from a doctor advising me not to sit in rooms full potentially-infected breathers.

    But either way, no matter what, I'm never going back into any office anywhere to work.

  • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Sunday May 10, 2020 @11:14AM (#60044092)
    What do you mean by "after the pandemic"? How do you know when the pandemic ends? The end is currently nowhere near in sight and sure as hell won't coincide with the reopening of any country's economy.
    • by JcMorin ( 930466 )
      That's a good question, I don't think there is a "line" where it end, but like H1N1 or SARS are some point the number of infected is soo low that nobody talks about it and it's considered done. My biggest concern is NOT the virus but the people living in fear of others. Shaking hands might never come back for some individuals.
      • My biggest concern is NOT the virus but the people living in fear of others. Shaking hands might never come back for some individuals.

        That's ironic, because the alleged origin of handshaking was to allay mutual fear that the other may be palming a weapon.

    • What do you mean by "after the pandemic"? How do you know when the pandemic ends?

      When there is herd immunity. This may happen as a natural result of getting it or mass inoculations with the release of a vaccine. Should this COVID become endemic then there will be a large push for advanced development of vaccines.

    • There is this peculiar foregone conclusion that the pandemic ends at all. This virus has spread far enough that it's entirely possible it will become as common as the seasonal flu if it continues to mutate (as it apparently already has).
  • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Sunday May 10, 2020 @11:27AM (#60044132) Homepage
    200 hours of driving to and from work is 5 40-hour weeks!!! 5 weeks for which you aren't paid.

    It is FAR better to work from home. You don't lose the time getting ready for work, driving to work, driving home, and changing your work clothes. No charge for fuel, less car maintenance.

    Less pollution because you didn't drive.

    Also, I find that I often need to stop and think about some coding problem. I can go do something else in my house while my brain is working on that. At work, doing something else besides working may not be accepted.

    We access our customer's computer systems from home. We don't need to go there often.
  • Eventually, like everything else, this too shall pass. There'll be a vaccine, a treatment, and eventually everything will go back to more-or-less normal. Maybe not tomorrow, maybe not next week, maybe not this year, but it WILL go back to normal. Anyone telling you anything different is just trying to keep you in a constant state of terror, forever, because you're easier to control that way. Don't fall for it.
    • by Brama ( 80257 ) on Sunday May 10, 2020 @12:04PM (#60044270) Homepage

      Or, maybe they say this because there's a chance we'll gain valuable new insights from this experience and will be able to extract something good out of it that actually benefits our lives. Not everyone walks around with an agenda trying to beat people into submission with fear.

      • Not everyone walks around with an agenda trying to beat people into submission with fear.

        Only the people in power. And it works just fine for them.

      • What I'm talking about in part is what this guy [slashdot.org] is alluding to: there are people in this country, just like every country around the world, who won't 'waste' a perfectly good crisis like this one, if they can leverage it to gain power and control of the masses, implement their own agenda, and so on.
        But what I'm also talking about is the idea that we're all going to have to be 6' away from each other forever, or have our faces covered forever, and so on -- basically, we're not going to be living in some pos
        • by Gonoff ( 88518 )

          we're not going to be living in some post-apocalyptic 80's disaster movie forever, IT WILL END, IT WILL END, IT WILL END!

          Have you ever seen pictures of people walking around cities in China from before the current crisis? It was quite normal for them to wear masks. I used to think it was because of the air pollution there but apparently is from before that.

          They started wearing them because of the "Spanish" flu a hundred years ago. People just kept on wearing them, taught their children to and it kept on. Many people who wear them now do so because they, mistakenly, think that this will stop them getting the current nasty.

          • You are missing the POINT. You're so wrapped up in worrying about RIGHT NOW that you can't see ahead. THIS WILL END. LIFE WILL RETURN TO NORMAL. THIS SHIT IS NOT NORMAL.
            • by Gonoff ( 88518 )

              Firstly, I am not missing your point. It's just wrong.

              I am not worrying, I can't. I didn't worry when bullets were flying over my head. I ran though!

              Normal will change - or already has done. People are going to want much more personal space. Shaking hands will continue not to be done much - except by the idiots wanting to prove that they are not scared of viruses. Perhaps, like people in the far east, many people will wear what looks like a surgical mask - for no discernible personal benefit. Working

  • by Ashthon ( 5513156 ) on Sunday May 10, 2020 @11:34AM (#60044156)

    Remote work mixes your personal and work life in a way many people find undesirable. I like to keep my personal life separate, so when I'm at home I don't have to worry about work. Remote work blurs the line, so you're never truly away from work because your home is your workplace. This can lead to you spending a lot more time working.

    Remote work also makes communication very difficult, so a query that can be resolved in seconds in an office can take a lot longer when working remotely. These delays would all add up and would ultimately destroy productivity.

    The other problem is that, given half a chance, many people won't do any work at all. Remote work makes it easy for the slackers to avoid work, which increases the workload for more diligent people.

    I hate everting about remote work, but fortunately it seems the majority of people feel the same. Hopefully we can all get back to the office soon.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Brama ( 80257 )

      Remote work also makes communication very difficult, so a query that can be resolved in seconds in an office can take a lot longer when working remotely.

      I find that this is more true if only a few people in a team are working remotely. With *everyone* working remotely, it works much better since in normal office environments, informal meetings tend to have much influence. At least with everyone remote there is less of that undercurrent, and I see a positive move towards better processes around decision making. And yeeeeah, there's definitely people who do not like that and prefer to influence differently.

      • If your career progression involves influencing people, you will have an advantage if you can see them face to face. Managers need to have the skill to prevent "whispers in the ear" gaining special advantage. Sadly...

    • Remote work doesn't equate to working from home. Under normal circumstances, I work from either a coworking location or some sort of coffee shop or whatever. Still firewalls my work from home life, and retains 90% of the advantage of not traveling to the office.

      As to your slackers comment, that's idiotic. It's easy to put metrics on the work produced without tying it to the amount of time chained to a desk.

      Everyone I have worked with is generally more productive and dedicated than those that assume

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "Remote work mixes your personal and work life in a way many people find undesirable. I like to keep my personal life separate, so when I'm at home I don't have to worry about work. Remote work blurs the line, so you're never truly away from work because your home is your workplace. This can lead to you spending a lot more time working."

      Sure, but that's a you problem. You can also spend a lot less time working because you don't feel the peer pressure of waiting to leave until lots of others have even if you

    • by Gonoff ( 88518 )

      Remote work makes it easy for the slackers to avoid work, which increases the workload for more diligent people.

      Remote work will continue as the worries of uninformed managers turn out to be mistaken. There are no figures around yet, but anecdotally, it seems that more work is done by people working from home. If you don't want to work from home, that is for you and your employer. If you are less productive away from the office, that will help but home work can often be a win-win.

      Working from home saves you commuting time, fuel, "business appropriate" clothing and hurried lunches. It means businesses can have sma

  • Sure, for many jobs remote work is a great way of working ... as long as the schools stays open.

    With kids at home, juggling home schooling and work is nigh impossible. Each evening, we're completely exhausted, and just collapse on the couch quietly sighing, while nursing ourselves to sleep with some mindless TV.
     

    • I don't have kids, so I could care less about school being open, from the standpoint of working from home. Those I have worked with that DO have kids manage to figure out a way of making it work.

      Opening schools too early is going to make this pandemic MUCH worse. School aged children are a major vector of infection in the best of times.

      • Some years ago, friends of mine had kids several years apart. In both cases, when the kids were in day care or preschool, the scenario would run like this. Friends invite me to dinner. I arrive, drop off whatever I brought for the kitchen, then sit on the sofa. Kid arrives, climbs up or plops down on me, and unfailingly manages to flail around and get a finger into one of my nostrils or eyes despite my wearing eyeglasses. Not very many hours later: scratchy feeling red eye then sore throat then varying
    • or from that "Mayfield-like" town with low housing costs and the desirable culture... Well, it's not for me but the flexibility to live anywhere should help smaller communities. I'm suprised we don't see more places advertising themselves as "telecomuting paradise" communities.
  • People always say, "If people didn't want to work for Uber then they wouldn't".

    Well to that I say, if 43% of people wanted to work from home, why didn't companies respond to that market demand?

    Yes there is a market but it isn't free to every individual. There are rules and forces out of the individual's control.
    • Still obsessed with Uber? jesusfuck. Give it a rest. That's not even part of this conversation. Neither are your beloved Taxi Cabs.

    • Either you misread the title, summary, and full article, or you are trying to twist the numbers to support a different agenda.

      The title is "43% Say They'll Want to Work Remotely More Often." There isn't enough information in the summary or full article to know if that means they could work from home before and now want to do it more often, or if they didn't work from home previously and now want to do it more often.

      Without the background information about the survey, everyone they questioned could have
  • Monday to Thursday casual has reached unprecedented levels

  • Even After the Pandemic, 100% of employers expect their workers to... well... work.

  • One of the stupidest objections to remote working is that people might take advantage of it. This conveniently ignores the fact that people can and do goof off at work. If your evaluation of productivity relies in any way on "in sight, in mind" you are too stupid to evaluate either style of working.

  • It doesn't matter what people want in this instance. It matters what the companies want. You'd think they would want their workers to be happy and productive, but I see little evidence of that in the U.S..

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

    On average, Americans spent roughly 27 minutes on their one-way commute to work in 2018

    If you get 27 minutes in a big city, you're fucking lucky.

  • by Torvac ( 691504 )
    the last few years ive been doing work from home 1 day / week just because traffic sucks and i can do stuff around the house while working (waiting for builds ..). but more than 1 day, never. i hate to work and i hate doing stuff i hate in my own house, at my desk where i usually do stuff i like.
  • On average, Americans spent roughly 27 minutes on their one-way commute to work in 2018

    try 90 - 120 minutes each way - bay area traffic man.

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