Birmingham, Alabamaโ€”April 16, 2019. The flexible workplace option of working from home or telecommuting is growing rapidly. According to Global Workplace Analytics, telecommuting in the U.S. grew 140% in the past decade, more than ten-times faster than in the rest of the world. Additionally, of those working from home, 31 percent work from home on a full-time basis, which is defined as four or five days per week. This statistic has also increased, up from 24 percent in 2012, according to a Gallup survey. Itโ€™s a win-win-win proposition for employees, the employer, the community, and the environment.

This is a huge win for employees who want flexibility and also want to reduce or eliminate the time associated with their daily commute to work, the stress of traffic congestion, and the costs associated with commuting. Working from home has been shown to lower job stress, improve work-life balance, and enhance job satisfaction.

For employers, allowing employees to work from home provides a tremendous savings in the cost of office space, increased employee retention, increased productivity, decrease of unplanned absenteeism, and a host of other intangibles.

Most environmental groups suggest that allowing more employees to work from home is the single most important action that employers, individuals, and cities can take to help the environment. For the community, working from home relieves traffic congestion, which is a big problem for larger cities.

Realistically, the working-from-home option can only apply to work that can be conducted remotely. On the plus side, with the knowledge-based economy that currently dominates the U.S., many, if not most, jobs could be performed remotely.

The biggest barriers to remote employment are the managers in organizations who feel that employee presence is the only way they will know their employee is producing. Unfortunately, they do not know how to manage teams remotely, and they perceive that having remote employees is a way to eliminate managers.

Working from home is not for every team member. It requires discipline and exceptional organizational skills. All distractions are to be removed and people with a need for high levels of social contact couldnโ€™t make it. Also, there is a concern about employee engagement and career progression (out of sight, out of mind).

This situation creates a great opportunity for HR and talent management executives to convince the management team that moving in the direction of increased telecommuting is beneficial. This can be accomplished on a systematic basis with changes in policies and procedures to allow more employees to work from home and showing this is the best way to retain employees, increase productivity, and lower costs.

One such study was conducted by the ROI Instituteยฎ. This study involved an insurance company, which allowed two job groups to work from home: the claims processors and claims examiners. Each of these employees volunteered to work from home under several prescribed conditions. Steps were taken to minimize the barriers for managers and employees.

The work-from-home program was perceived as win-win-win. It was a win for the company, with an ROI of 299% based on improved productivity, office expense reduction, turnover reduction, and unplanned absenteeism improvement. It was a win for the employees as they not only remained with the employer, but were much more satisfied, experienced less stress, reported improved work/life balance, and, of course, saved the cost of a daily commute.

For the environmentalists, it was certainly a win, as a large number of commuters were taken off the streets and roads, resulting in the prevention of more than 25,000 tons of carbon being released into the atmosphere.

Case Study

The challenge is for HR teams to take exploring the work-from-home option as a project and show the projectโ€™s value in terms that executives completely understand. It can help to retain talent, lower costs, and help to save the environment. For a copy of the 36-page case study on working from home, click here.

How-To Books

Studies of this type are based on the ROI Methodology applied to HR applications and are available in our book, Proving the Value of HR: How and Why to Measure ROI, second edition, published by the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM). This popular book provides step-by-step guidelines to conduct these types of studies. A companion book of case studies, Value for Money: Measuring the Return on Non-Capital Investments, ROI Case Studies, Vol. I, is also available. This 500-page book features 25 detailed cases on a variety of Human Resources/Learning & Development programs. Purchase either of these books at less than half of the Amazon price.

ROI Workshop

To learn how to conduct these types of studies for the HR audience internally, participate in a two-day internal workshop, โ€œMeasuring the ROI in HR and Learning & Development.โ€ This engaging, content-rich workshop is offered internally, and a proposal can easily be developed for your organization. For a description of this workshop, click here.

ROI Certificationยฎ

To build serious evaluation capability with the ROI Methodology, including conducting an ROI study to become a Certified ROI Professional (CRP)ยฎ, consider participating in the ROI Certification process. The certification process focuses on evaluating an actual procedure all the way to ROI. It involves five days of learning and planning your evaluation, followed by virtual support and feedback until the evaluation is completed. For more details on the ROI Certification process, click here. For dates and locations of scheduled ROI Certification workshops held in the U.S., click here.

For individuals unable to attend a workshop, there are multiple ways to become a Certified ROI Professional. For more details on certification options, click here.

 

About ROI Instituteยฎ

ROI Institute, Inc., founded in 1992 as a service-driven organization, assists professionals in improving programs and processes using the ROI Methodologyยฎ developed by Dr. Jack J. Phillips and Dr. Patti P. Phillips. This Methodology is the global leader in measurement and evaluation including the use of return on investment (ROI) in non-traditional applications. ROI Institute regularly offers workshops, provides consulting services, publishes books and case studies, and conducts research on the use of measurement and ROI. This makes ROI Institute the leading source of content, tools, and services in measurement, evaluation, and analytics. Working with more than one hundred ROI consultants, ROI Institute applies the ROI Methodology in 20 fields in over 70 countries. ROI Institute authors have written or edited over 100 books, translated into 38 languages. Organizations build internal capability with the help of ROI Institute and its ROI Certification process.  By successfully completing this process, individuals are awarded the Certified ROI Professionalยฎ (CRP) designation, which is respected by executives in organizations worldwide. For more information on ROI Institute, please contact info@roiinstitute.net or visit www.roiinstitute.net.

ROI Instituteยฎ, ROI Methodologyยฎ, Certified ROI Professionalยฎ, and ROI Certificationยฎ are registered trademarks owned by ROI Institute, Inc. and are used by others only with written permission of Jack and Patti Phillips.