Tag Archive for WFH

Work From Anywhere Movement

Work From Anywhere MovementChanges in the workforce are beginning to emerge as we suffer through 6 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Matt Mullenweg, CEO of Automattic, the parent company of WordPress and Tumblr blogged, “This might be a chance for a great reset in terms of how we work.Slack co-founder and CEO Stewart Butterfield told the BBCWe all know that work will never be the same, even if we don’t yet know all the ways in which it will be different.” Recent reports from Owl Labs and staffing firm Robert Half put numbers to what many have sensed – the nature of work has changed to work from anywhere.

Work from anywhere benefits

The Owl Labs State of Remote Work report and Robert Half 2021 Salary Guide (PDF) looked at work from anywhere. The reports found unexpected benefits and challenges. Employee expectations have shifted as 69% of full-time workers in the U.S. are working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic. The change in the nature of work has benefits for employees and employers.

Employees are seeing economic and personal benefits from the change in the nature of work. Owl Labs reports that workers are saving almost $479.20 per month on additional expenses related to work. That is nearly $6,000.00 a year savings. U.S. Federal Highway Administration reports that U.S. road traffic fell by more than 25% during the lockdowns. Traffic levels dell to the lowest level since 1995. As a result, Owl Labs found that the average WFM employee saving 40 minutes per day on the daily commute. That totals to over three workdays per month which can be dedicated to personal objectives.

Work-life balance

Remote work has mental health and work-life balance benefits, too.

  • work-life balance77% of respondents told Owl Labs that having the option to work from home would make them happier.
  • 77% report that working remotely would make them better able to manage work-life balance.
  • 72% of all survey respondents agreed that the ability to work remotely would make them less stressed

In 2013 old-school Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, claimed, “Speed and quality are often sacrificed when we work from home.” She was wrong. Employers are also gaining benefits from the new work from anywhere. 20% of employees told Owl Labs they worked more hours per week during the pandemic – for the same pay.

working more hours per week during the pandemicDuring COVID, the average work from anywhere employees worked an extra 26 hours each month. Which is nearly an extra day every week. Despite claims to the contrary from old-school managers, worker productivity has improved. 75% of people working from home report they are the same or more productive during COVID-19. In 2020, people are using video meetings 50% more than pre-COVID-19.

Being able to work remotely some of the time also makes the employers more attractive to staff. Respondents told the researchers that with remote work:  

  • 80% would feel like their employer cares,
  • 74% would be less likely to leave their employer,
  • 59% would be more likely to choose one employer over another in their next job if they offered remote work.

look for another role that allowed remote workIf working from anywhere was no longer an option after COVID-19, almost 70% of respondents would be less happy. Almost half would look for another role that allowed remote work. Robert Half found that 60% of workers want to work for an organization that values its staff during unpredictable times.

80% of full-time workers told Owl Labs they expect to work from anywhere at least three times per week after the lockdown. Robert Half also found that 74% of employees want to work remotely more frequently following the pandemic.

Increase surveillance

Of course, this is not all puppy dogs and rainbows. Employers may increase surveillance of WFH staff. Firms uncomfortable with the work from anywhere movement can turn to software track employees. Productivity monitoring is available from Aware, ActivTrakTime Doctor, or TeramindPwC has developed a facial recognition tool that logs when employees are away from their computer screens while working from home.

increased surveillance of WFH staffThe Guardian reports that interest in Teramind’s product has tripled during the pandemic. When Teramind’s “agent” is downloaded to employees’ computers, they can measure employee time spent on different windows. It can playback or live-stream a view of an employee’s screen and record their every keystroke. It can also raise a flag if certain predetermined words are typed. Eli Sutton, the firm’s head of operations told the paper that 70% of Teramind’s clients are concerned about productivity. He said, “Teramind is an extra set of eyes to make sure distractions aren’t causing issues.

Forty-three percent of survey respondents told Owl Labs that if their employer started monitoring their WFH activity as a way to track productivity they would be unhappy or leave.

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Having an expanded remote workforce alters the dynamics of work. Employees will no longer be bound by geography to find the best opportunity. Employers can expand their pool of candidates. The work from anywhere movement will also raise tensions between old-school managers who are about control and their remote employee’s privacy.

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

No Love for 2FA

No Love for 2FAEveryone has gone to the ATM to grab some cash. Swipe your card – enter your PIN and out comes your cash. We have been doing this for years. Using the ATM is one of the most established uses of the IT security best practice of two-factor authentication (2FA). Lets break that down.

  1. You present your ATM card to the machine (something you have),
  2. Next, you enter a secret PIN (something you know).
  3. Without both of these things (authentication factors), you don’t get your cash.

Two-factor authentication (2FA) provides an extra layer of protection for system access, by asking a user for a second means of identification. 2FA also called multi-factor authentication (MFA), requires at least two authentication factors, including:

  • authentication factorsA knowledge factor (something only the user knows, such as an ATM PIN);
  • A possession factor (something only the user has, such as an ATM card);
  • An inheritance factor (something the user is a fingerprint or retina pattern).

The most popular forms of 2FA include answers to secret questions, a code sent to your phone, or one-time password-generating tokens.

Two-factor authentication2FA is a way to mitigate risks associated with unauthorized access, especially in the current COVID-19 era of increased work from home (WFA). And yet, despite these benefits. Computer Economics has posted a report, Two-Factor Authentication Adoption, and Best Practices, which studied the adoption and practice of 2FA. The report says that firms are not using 2FA to the extent they should be to ensure organizational security:

  • 18% do not use 2FA;
  • 25% are implementing 2FA for the first time;
  • 34% practice 2FA formally and consistently.

Why is 2FA needed? Because as followers of the Bach Seat know, username and password pairs as authentication factors suck. CE writes that passwords can be “phished,” stolen, discovered, and cracked in many ways. Humans are as bad at making good passwords and changing them regularly as they are at eating their daily requirement of vegetables.

In the presser Tom Dunlap, director of research for Computer Economics, said,2FA can go a long way to protecting a company

The big picture is that 2FA is inconvenient, and users just want access … Users often rebel against it because the extra layer is seen as onerous or unnecessary.  However … companies face a wide array of security and privacy threats and 2FA can go a long way to protecting a company

Inconvenience isn’t the only issue. As I have chronicled on the Bach Seat each form of two-factor authentication has its own weaknesses. For instance, security questions can often be easily guessed. tokens can be lost and SMS can be hacked.

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Another issue with 2FA is that it is unevenly implemented and there’s no central place to check if a firm has enabled it on its public-facing site. However, a website, Two Factor Auth (2FA) is trying to fill that void. Two Factor Auth (2FA) is a list of websites and whether or not they support 2FA.

Most of the well-known and commonly used sites and services are listed. The site explains what types of 2FA the firm supports. There’s even a Twitter or Facebook link where you can poke them on social media to start using 2FA – if they don’t support 2FA.

Only 1/3 of firms love two-factor authentication to use it well, despite the security benefits it provides to the firm and their customers.

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

WFH Was Growing Before COVID

Updated 05/17/2020 – Statista published this chart which shows the top reasons for WFH in 2019, as cited by U.S. remote workers.

Top reasons Americans wanted to work remotely

WFH Was Growing Before COVIDWork from home (WFH) – the practice of working remotely – has exploded with the COVID-19 pandemic. With social distancing in place, millions of more workers around the world started working from home in March 2020. But WFM is not a new trend. Computer Economics reports that over the past 11 years work from home has grown for many reasons.

Working remotely

Despite the pandemic, the trend toward telecommuting was already well underway according to Computer Economics. To measure how much telecommuting is occurring, they polled IT managers and asked them to estimate the percentage of their total staff that works from home at one of three levels.

In the 2019 report Trends in Telecommuting in the IT Workforce, Computer Economics found that 92% of IT shops allowed some form of remote work:

  • 37% “only a specified amount of time”
  • 35% “only under special circumstances
  • 20% allow personnel to work from home as they choose
  • 8% did not allow any telecommuting in 2019.

Trends in Telecommuting in the IT Workforce, Computer Economics

When Computer Economics conducted the same research in 2008, 64% of IT organizations did not allow their personnel to work from home – at all.

Computer Economics concludes that even before the pandemic, the growth of WFM was enabled by a number of technologies. They cite the growth of high-speed internet, mobile devices, remote access, low-cost web conferencing, VoIP, and cloud computing.

three business demandsWFM growth has been driven by three business demands. The research firm identified concerns about work/life balance, workforce retention, and business continuity. in the face of a pandemic is just one more benefit of the trend.

Tom Dunlap, research director for Computer Economics, wrote in the presser:

Many business leaders are learning a hard lesson … Having robust, companywide telecommuting capabilities in place—even if only used one or two days a week—should be deployed as a contingency measure during pandemics or other natural disasters.

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I work for one of the 35% “special circumstances” firms. At the beginning of the month, I submitted a proposal to start to allow “specified amount” telecommuting. But with the onset of COVID – they started to allow WFH – we will see if it sticks  around in the “new normal.

Stay safe out there!

Related article

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.