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We are a virtual company that helps both public and private organizations adopt new technologies to work more effectively, including teleworking. President Joanne Pratt approaches change as a futurist interested in what is going to happen next. As we evolve from the Industrial Age into the Information Age we are reshaping ourselves into a more mobile, global workforce linked by technology. Today we have teleworking, telecommuting, the virtual office, mobile workers and homebased business owners and at-home professionals. “E-work” is the new term used in Europe. On this web site we share with you trends that we see and proven "how to" tips for all forms of mobile work.
New Research:
A particularly encouraging finding is that employees, not the contract workers, account for the sharp increase in work at home, suggesting that employers are finally realizing the benefits of a more flexible workforce. Joanne Pratt presented highlights of the research at the 2007 Transportation Research Board (TRB) conference. Two more trends stand out: First, Americans are increasingly mobile. They work anywhere, spending even more time working in the car or on travel than last year.
And they are working more at home. In fact, in one year there was a 24 percent drop in people who never work at home and a 20 percent increase in those who work at home nearly every day.
As reported in my research, Teleworking Comes of Age with Broadband, teleworkers are enthusiastic adopters of the high speed, "always on" connection to the Internet, and more recently, access to wireless. See WorldatWork's Telework Trendlines for 2006 for full report. Conference Report: Telecommunications helps in emergencies. You can hear and see Joanne Pratt's presentation, Earthquake and Fire: When Virtual Alternatives Offer an Answer at the Transportation Research Board Panel Session: Major Disruptions to Personal Travel: Behavioral Responses and the Role of Telecommunications. Survey Methods A the TRB conference, it was personally gratifying to hear enthusiastic praise for the survey that I designed for the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG). Wall, Safirova and Jiang, authors of "What Drives Telecommuting? The Relative Impact of Worker Demographics, Employers Characteristics, and Job Types," pointed to the good employer and job information that large survey datasets usually lack and the careful separation of home-based business owners from true employee and contract telecommuters. A consultant for NuStats on that survey, I am available to others concerned with accurately understanding the new mobile workforce. Home-based Businesses have
an Edge In the press conference announcing the new study, Joanne Pratt said
there are two kinds of home-based business owners: those who start their
business at home with hopes of growing--The Steve Jobs and Michael
Dells--and those who work to support a life style they enjoy without the
hassle of employees. Pratt predicted that more home-based businesses
will appear as baby boomers retire: "I see the baby boomers formally
retiring at age 65, but choosing to run a home-based business to gain
primary or secondary income or just to keep their hand in." "Socio-Technical Issues Related to Home-Based Work" 1988 Book Chapter "Telework and Society – Implications for Corporate and Societal Cultures" 2000 Full Paper Teleworker Attitudes and Work Styles 1997 Full Report Teleworking Comes of Age with Broadband 2003 Full Report A caller had scoured the Internet for a definition of "informal teleworking." He needed a way to include ad hoc teleworking going on in his agency in a legal document. We can help organizations solve this problem. See Module 4 under implementation.
"Mobile Courtesy Matters" according to a survey by Sprint. 100% of
mobile phone users felt they were courteous of other people: they moved
away at least a couple of feet to take calls. But 80% felt that other
people were "less courteous today than five years ago."
Take a look at the imaginative ways people
cope.
Research publications on "Telework Trends in the United States" and
"Survey Instrument Design."
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