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Feature Contents
1. As Gas Prices Go Up, So Can Productivity
HR leaders should enable more remote work options that help inflation-battered employees save on energy costs. Employees will not be the only ones to benefit. Studies show that telecommuters are often more productive than office-bound employees doing the same work.
2. HR Responsibility: Stop Whining and Take Ownership of Your People Processes
In business, those who manage a process are responsible for the process’s results. Period. The same established connection between ownership of a process and accountability for results must finally be accepted in HR.
3. Ready for a Crash?
Business strategies are purposely designed to flex whenever the economic environment shifts from expansion to contraction. Most HR departments, on the other hand, don’t flex.
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Time to Telecommute
Rather than waiting for national gas prices to top out this summer, HR leaders should act now by enabling more remote work options that help inflation-battered employees save on energy costs.
By Dr. John Sullivan
t has been nearly impossible to avoid all of the press coverage surrounding
the escalating price of gas lately, but chances are that you haven’t asked
yourself what high energy prices have to do with HR. The answer is simple:
Everything that affects workforce productivity should be addressed by a truly
strategic HR function. Rather than waiting for national gas prices to top out
this sum, HR leaders should act now by enabling more remote work options that
help inflation-battered employees save on energy costs.
Employees will not be the only ones to benefit. Studies show that telecommuters
are often more productive than office-bound employees doing the same work. Cisco
Systems, for instance, estimates a 25 percent increase in worker productivity
among telecommuters. In addition, the secondary benefits of leveraging more
remote work stack up quick. Cisco Systems, Sun Microsystems and IBM have saved
millions on real estate costs; Deloitte estimates a $40 million savings in
reduced employee turnover costs; and Google has found that you can often hire
higher-quality talent by taking the work to the talent.
If you doubt the visibility of this issue among workers, eavesdrop on what they
are talking about. Chances are you’ll overhear numerous conversations about the
cost of gas or groceries throughout the day. While some items have actually
gotten cheaper, the increase in the cost of goods that people buy frequently is
affecting your employees’ budgets.
Rising costs are leading to increased rates of depression and increased
commuting time as employees shift to public transportation, both of which
decrease employee productivity. In addition, higher energy prices are affecting
home heating and air conditioning bills. While real wages have kept pace with
inflation in most markets, the uptick in the price of goods purchased frequently
is driving the perception that "real" income is declining. As a result, workers
with specialized skills who understand their value in the global talent economy
are exerting pressure to raise wages. When demands are not met, turnover rates
increase and individuals seek work closer to where they live.
Some HR departments are way ahead of the curve: The most obvious action to
consider is increasing the number of remote work options that are available to
employees. Nearly 60 percent of American workers state that they would like to
have remote work options, yet only 18 percent do. A few firms are taking the
lead, allowing more than 50 percent of employees to work remotely. Best Buy, for
example, created a breakthrough program known as the Results Only Work
Environment (which won a Workforce Management Optimas Award). It affords
employees working in their corporate office the freedom to choose when and where
they work, as long as they produce negotiated results. Early evidence suggests
the new workforce strategy is producing productivity gains as high as 35
percent. Other major firms that have done extraordinary things with remote work
options include Capital One, Xerox, Agilent, McGraw-Hill and Microsoft.
Both Sun and Microsoft have begun providing remote "touchdown spaces" in
suburban locations closer to where employees live. This option allows employees
to access secure networks and collaborate with co-workers one or more days a
week without having to drive long distances.
Some action steps: There are many things that HR can do, but the first option
should be to re-assess which jobs can be done remotely—at least one day a week.
Next, invest in technologies that support or enable workforce collaboration
independent of the workers’ locations, including conference phone lines, wikis,
online forums, videoconferencing and other Web-based meeting platforms that keep
dispersed workers connected.
While it is certainly true that many in HR and line management still believe
it’s harder to manage workers you can’t see, leaders need to demand change. They
can point to the growing number of success stories to demonstrate that personal
biases to maintain the status quo will not be tolerated. Forward thinkers in HR
need to develop education that demonstrates with statistics and examples that
more jobs can successfully be accomplished remotely.
It might seem crazy to some that HR would consider energy, grocery and housing
prices among the things that should drive HR strategy, but that’s old-school
thinking. If HR is to become more than an overhead function role, it must become
an internal productivity consulting center, providing solutions to managers for
every issue that affects workforce productivity.
Workforce Management, June 23, 2008, p. 66
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Dr. John Sullivan is a professor of management at San Francisco State University,
where he has
taught for more than 30 years. E-mail editors@workforce.com to comment.
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