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There is no workplace like home

The Chi­nese cap­i­tal of Bei­jing is a famous­ly awful place to com­mute. For Eva, who has recent­ly had to start remote work­ing, the change has large­ly been a wel­come one. A busi­ness devel­op­ment man­ag­er for a local busi­ness accel­er­a­tor, she has been able to keep in touch with her team through a sched­ule of reg­u­lar video meet­ings and feels if any­thing her work­day has become more pro­duc­tive. But the bound­aries between work and home life are becom­ing increas­ing­ly blurred.

While peo­ple across the UK began work­ing from home, many for the first time, in mid-March, mil­lions of Chi­nese work­ers have been encour­aged to stay away from the office since the begin­ning of the year in a bid to con­tain the coro­n­avirus. The result? The world’s largest exper­i­ment in remote work­ing. So what can we learn from this unprece­dent­ed event and is the world of work real­ly about to change for­ev­er?

What the transition has been like in China

For Chi­nese employ­ees, the expe­ri­ence of remote work­ing has been mixed. Cassie, a mar­ket­ing man­ag­er based in Shang­hai, says one major pos­i­tive has been spend­ing more time with her chil­dren. Since start­ing to work from home at the begin­ning of Feb­ru­ary, she’s now able to read them a bed­time sto­ry every night, some­thing that was rarely pos­si­ble before.

For Daft, a soft­ware project man­ag­er based in Shenyang, work­ing remote­ly has been dif­fi­cult. His work requires expen­sive spe­cial­ist equip­ment, such as vir­tu­al real­i­ty head­sets, which he is not able to access at home.

His girl­friend Mandy, a com­put­er pro­gram­mer work­ing on soft­ware for a major inter­na­tion­al car man­u­fac­tur­er, has also strug­gled. For secu­ri­ty rea­sons, she has not been allowed to remove her work com­put­er from the office. Instead, she has had to use a com­pa­ny VPN to con­trol it remote­ly from her lap­top at home. The com­par­a­tive­ly low inter­net speeds avail­able have made this process slow and frus­trat­ing.

Flexible working in the UK

How should businesses manage remote workers?

While oth­er firms have strug­gled, Eva believes her employ­er has man­aged the cri­sis well because it has react­ed uncom­mon­ly quick­ly. As soon as aware­ness of the virus became wide­spread, the company’s man­age­ment began work­ing on a detailed plan for how employ­ees could com­plete their dai­ly tasks from home.

This includ­ed specifics such as what col­lab­o­ra­tion tools teams should use and how best to divide tasks among indi­vid­u­als. Dur­ing the first week of remote work­ing, staff par­tic­i­pat­ed in online train­ing cours­es on how to use the company’s remote work­ing tools and were test­ed on their under­stand­ing.

A fac­tor help­ing Chi­nese com­pa­nies is the already wide­spread use of work­force com­mu­ni­ca­tion tools, such as WeChat Enter­prise. Many com­pa­nies have also turned to the pro­duc­tiv­i­ty app DingTalk, which has become the most down­loaded free app in China’s iOS app store. Work­ers have been using West­ern pro­grams, such as Microsoft Lync, to com­mu­ni­cate with col­leagues and clients over­seas. Sim­i­lar com­mu­ni­ca­tion tools, such as Slack, Zoom and Microsoft Teams, exist out­side of Chi­na, although the scale of adop­tion across West­ern com­pa­nies varies wild­ly.

Due to China’s hier­ar­chi­cal work cul­ture, many man­agers in the coun­try demand that work­ers clock in and clock out, and require reg­u­lar check-in meet­ings to ensure staff are not shirk­ing their respon­si­bil­i­ties.

How­ev­er, employ­ees say this dam­ages staff morale and is inef­fec­tive; some work­ers admit­ted wak­ing up to dig­i­tal­ly clock in, only to imme­di­ate­ly go back to bed. Instead, they feel man­agers would be bet­ter off trust­ing work­ers and allow­ing them flex­i­bil­i­ty, apprais­ing the qual­i­ty of their work, rather than being con­cerned about when the work was done.

Is remote working the new normal?

The expe­ri­ence of work­ers in Chi­na shows that phys­i­cal work spaces are unlike­ly to become a thing of the past. Offices allow com­pa­nies to devel­op rela­tion­ships and cul­tures that are dif­fi­cult to repli­cate dig­i­tal­ly. In cramped and expen­sive cities, many work­ers will also not have access to the space, facil­i­ties and equip­ment they take for grant­ed in the office. Work­ing away from the office full time also increas­es the risk of lone­li­ness and oth­er men­tal health issues.

Offices allow com­pa­nies to devel­op rela­tion­ships and cul­tures that are dif­fi­cult to repli­cate dig­i­tal­ly

The most like­ly long-term change is that for some work­ers there are more oppor­tu­ni­ties to work remote­ly for some of the time. The coro­n­avirus out­break presents man­agers with an oppor­tu­ni­ty to see which parts of the busi­ness remain effec­tive dur­ing a peri­od of remote work­ing. For jobs and teams whose per­for­mance is large­ly unaf­fect­ed, boss­es are like­ly to be more open to arrange­ments that see employ­ees work part of the week in the office and part of the week at home.

What will the new workplace look like?

As remote work­ing becomes more pop­u­lar, com­pa­nies will also have to adapt their phys­i­cal spaces to the needs of work­ers who might only use them for part of the work­ing week.

“If peo­ple want and are able to stay home more, then what is the office for?” asks Claire Stephens, strat­e­gy direc­tor for Greater Chi­na at Gensler, a design and archi­tec­ture firm. She believes offices will exist for a remote work­force as “a place to con­nect with com­pa­ny cul­ture and col­lab­o­rate with col­leagues, clients and part­ners”. But they will also be a place “to go and focus and get work done if employ­ees face dis­trac­tions at home”.

For most offices, this is like­ly to mean few­er work sta­tions and more space devot­ed to meet­ings, events, train­ing and social­is­ing. It is also like­ly to mean a reduc­tion in space over­all.

Encour­aged by the way they’ve adapt­ed to the coro­n­avirus cri­sis, Eva’s com­pa­ny plans to move to a part-time remote work­ing arrange­ment, which will see employ­ees tak­ing turns to work from home for part of the week. The com­pa­ny sees this as a way of reduc­ing the amount of office space they need to rent and also a way to help work­ing par­ents bet­ter man­age their fam­i­ly lives.

Eva says she hopes this new mod­el will be effec­tive, but har­bours doubts whether a shift to more remote work­ing will be sus­tain­able in the long run. She is unlike­ly to be the only one ask­ing this ques­tion over the com­ing months.