We’ve been following the Marissa Mayer-driven discussion
over telecommuting. Here's a follow up.
This morning in The New Yorker James Surowiecki explains the
advantages a company gains when employees show up in the office:
The
fundamental point is that much of the value that gets created in a company
comes from the ways in which workers teach and learn from each other. If
telecommuters do less of that, the organization will be weaker. On top of this,
there’s evidence that telecommuting can make it hard to foster trust and
solidarity—an issue that matters a lot to Yahoo right now. Face time is still
the easiest way to build connections, and non-telecommuters are sometimes
jealous of their colleagues at home. One study of virtual teams found that if
team members simply met in person before working together they trusted each
other more and performed better. And studies show that managers often view
telecommuters, accurately or not, as uncommitted.
At a
struggling company, these problems can reinforce each other: distrust and lack
of focus lead people to disengage, which leads to more distrust, and so on.
This may explain why Mayer reportedly found that many full-time telecommuters
weren’t logging in to the company’s network enough, and why the company’s
offices were virtually empty on Fridays. In a company that has floundered for
years, it’s natural for workers to look out only for themselves. In that sense,
the ban on telecommuting isn’t just about productivity. “It’s demoralizing to
come to the office when no one’s there,” Waber said. “Just changing that is
valuable.”
Well said.
2 comments:
The author writes: "In a company that has floundered for years, it’s natural for workers to look out only for themselves."
The converse is also true, : When workers have been looking out only for themselvlook for years, it's natural for a company to flounder.
Just the thought of these parasites losing their sinecures brings a smile to my face. Perhaps many of the objections voiced by the chattering class are coming from people hoping to do as well, aspiring to rich compensation simply for being their wonderful, entitled selves.
I knew a guy who was described as looking for a job at which he could keep his feet up on his desk.
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