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5 Key Findings – One Year Of Working From Home

It’s been one year since many of us started working from home. I’ve been doing it for nearly 20 years now but for the rest of the business world its a much newer experience. A new survey from ISP company Evole IP has a new survey out with some interesting results. Among them, about 4 in 10 employees (38%) would like to continue to work from home 5 days per week. Thats a significant percentage.

The first finding from the survey should be of note to recruiters and business leaders. Working from home means less turnover.

Five key findings from the survey include:

KEY FINDING #1: Working from home makes employees less likely to look for a new job.

44% of employees say working remotely has opened up new job opportunities for them but 60.5% say they are less likely to look for a new job.

KEY FINDING #2: Over half of businesses expect employees will work remotely the majority of the time post-pandemic.

55% of C-Suite executives revealed that they expect their employees will work outside of a corporate office the majority of the time even after the pandemic has subsided. This has major ramifications for IT, HR, and operational/real estate planning.

KEY FINDING #3: Working from home is making employees more productive – much more so than many business leaders think.

75% of employees say they are more effective workers at home averaging a 31% increase in productivity. Business leaders generally agree but are less convinced about the level of improvement.

KEY FINDING #4: Employees are happy with their work from home technology but believe integration (unifying communications, collaboration, virtual desktops etc.), will make them more productive and secure.

77.5% of employees are happy with their company’s work from home tech choices. However, employees feel they could be more productive and secure if their solutions were integrated.

KEY FINDING #5: Most businesses aren’t planning any major adjustments to salaries or compensation due to work from home.

92.5% of respondents say their businesses aren’t making (or planning) any salary/compensation adjustments for remote workers. 5.5% have made or are considering compensation increases or stipends.

“Businesses did a great job putting together a variety of solutions when the pandemic hit to ensure their employees could function reasonably at home,” said Scott Kinka, Chief Innovation Officer for Evolve IP. “Now, as we see in the survey results, businesses are looking at a way to make these solutions sustainable for the long-term as both executives and employees see the value in a workforce that can be remote the majority of the time.

Kinka continued, “As a result, we’re seeing an increase in the number of businesses that are implementing remote work technology integration projects like unifying voice communications via Microsoft Teams direct routing and delivering apps via digital workspaces instead of virtual private networks. We expect this trend to accelerate for the foreseeable future.

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