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Governments around the world have instituted lockdowns to try and slow the Covid-19 pandemic, saying that only essential workers should be still going into work. But that just raises the question: who is an essential worker in a pandemic?
Tech workers are also the bridge that enables other employees to work from home, keeping whole sections of the economy running.If tech workers weren’t still working, we’d have no Zoom or Microsoft Teams for meetings, no Netflix to watch in the evening and , not to mention no phone or Internet service at all. Much of the work needed to keep the world’s software running can be done from home as long as employees have a laptop and appropriate network access.
Developers can develop; testers can test and; with a (I build the one I just linked there, in the interests of full disclosure:); bugs can be squashed from sofas, kitchen tables and even the occasional bed. With cloud-based workloads, good corporate VPNs and , a big proportion of the world’s software infrastructure could be maintained by people working from home.
Some essential tech workers, then, are still going into the office because they have to keep the world running.They face extra challenges as they continue going into work. Within the confines of their offices, they need to , sitting in separate rooms or widely spaced out in more open-plan layouts. They must take their hygiene to the extreme, washing their hands all the time and wiping surfaces before they touch them. These workers could struggle to travel into work in towns where , and might have to prepare their lunch at home because . These office-based workers have to adapt to a mix of different work interactions, with both their colleagues who are coming into the office, and remote interactions with the many employees who are working from home. All these constraints and context switches will make it more difficult to get things done. Companies need to understand that just as from-home workers are adapting to new conditions, the same is also true of those few who are still coming into the office.
Those tech workers, whether they work in small startups or large enterprises, from cutting-edge innovative companies to the vital utilities we use every day without thinking about it, are essential workers, and they deserve our gratitude and our respect.
Shimon Hason is CEO of .