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Though this work-from-home push results from a crisis, more and more are believing it will stick around when normality slowly returns.
Even before coronavirus panic hit, remote working was growing in popularity. Research by the International Workforce Group (IWG) polled 150,000 people across 80 countries in 2019 and found that remote working was not only the “new normal” but was a deal breaker for many. 83% of those involved said that, faced with two similar job options, they would turn down the one that disallowed remote working.
Gone is the eye-roll that comes after a three-hour meeting that could have been an email.Since the start of the COVID 19’s push to remote work, stories have flooded in of the benefits that had been discovered, from a One City executive whose two-day meeting in Asia a one-day video call and the employee whose days now tossing in a load of laundry during a work break or combining her lunch hour with a yoga stretch to decrease anxiety. It is also pushing those technophobe colleagues to come face to face with their fear and embrace the age of remote working with conference calls and digital diaries.
For those that offer remote working tools, this is their time to shine. Slack, a business chat software, has stated that they are “fully prepared for the situation” and have given out free resources like consultations for companies adapting to remote work for the first time. Microsoft is offering its cloud “productivity suite” for free to small business for six months, Google followed this path with its own business subscription, while Zoom , a videoconferencing service, has extended its free tier by allowing conversations to go longer than 40 minutes.
There is no doubt that it is a worrisome and stressful time. Illness is spreading, and the world is still trying to grasp this huge change of lifestyle with social distancing and self-quarantine, our main weapons for combating mass illness and hospital inundation.