UK employees have highlighted 'office culture' as the main reason for the
slow adoption of remote working and green practices, according to research from
Interwise.
The findings form part of an ongoing study into employee attitudes towards
the changing work environment.
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Some 30 per cent of respondents said that corporate culture, rather than
technological impediments, is the barrier to their employer's adoption of remote
working practices. A quarter cited the same reason for the slow adoption of
green initiatives.
"Culture could be the most difficult of all barriers to overcome, beyond
technology or cost," said Tony Gasson, international vice president at
Interwise.
Gartner
vice president and fellow Diane Morello added: "Companies that do not embrace
remote working will find it difficult to recruit and retain staff.
"Corporates should respond to user pressure for presence-aware applications,
social networking tools and wikis to support flexible working.
"IT organisations that attempt to shut down those tools for security and
policy reasons alone will do so at the expense of their relevance and value."
While connectivity, productivity and cost savings are major reasons for
investing in tools that support remote and mobile workers, other benefits may
prove to be just as valuable.
Companies can easily implement stay-at-home policies in the event of a
transportation or public health threat, for example, without dramatically
disabling the business.
Other reasons for slow uptake of remote working cited in the research were
lack of enabling technologies adopted in the work environment, reluctance to
give up face-to-face social interaction and management distrust of remote
workers.
Only half of employees said they were equipped to work remotely, despite
considering that over half of the meetings they attend do not need to be in
person.
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