Intelligent CIO Europe Issue 27 | Page 42

FEATURE: MOBILE WORKFORCE ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// In today’s modern age, it is easier than ever to give employees what they want: flexibility. Donna Kimmel, CHRO, Citrix, discusses the simple technologies that help employees become more engaged and productive, ultimately creating a better working experience. flexibility. She responds proactively by drafting a work-from-home policy; it’s well thought-out and positively received by managers, and it gains quick adoption. So far, so good, but as time passes it becomes apparent that productivity among remote workers has actually declined instead of improving. Now it’s the managers who are frustrated. They demand that their teams return to their traditional schedules. Employees feel cheated. How did this well- intentioned initiative go so wrong? Beyond good intentions: Tools matter I t can be tempting to think that workplace innovation is a one-size-fits- all proposition. That at any given time, there’s one best way for people to work, so all you need to do is read the prevailing wisdom and then follow suit. Of course, life is never that clear-cut. There’s no doubt that technology is transforming what’s possible, giving organisations more options in the kinds of work experiences they can allow and enable, but you’ve still got to make the right choices for your own business and someone else’s right answer might not be yours. What’s most important is to make sure that whatever direction you take, you’re in a position to make it a success. I’ve seen this dynamic at work before. An HR leader gets wind that employees are frustrated by time-wasting rush hour commutes and wish they had more The scenario I just described isn’t a matter of slacking remote workers or reactionary managers. Remote work may well have been the right answer for this company. The problem is that they lacked an effective way to make workplace flexibility successful – specifically, a technology infrastructure that lets people become just as efficient and productive at home as they would be in the office. Conventional HR wisdom can be a sea of anecdotal evidence but there’s good research showing this gap between intentions and capabilities. Recently, we conducted a survey to better understand how companies are thinking about remote work. We found that many managers are fully on-board in concept: more than a third of the managers we contacted said being able to work remotely two to three days per week would give them a more positive work experience, and nearly half believe that allowing employees to work remotely to avoid commuting would be the best way to improve their productivity. But managers are also aware of how difficult it can be to put this premise into practice. Only two-fifths When remote work doesn’t work – and how to make sure it does 42 INTELLIGENTCIO www.intelligentcio.com