Remote Work Series Part 3: How to Measure Productivity When Working from Home
Anatomy of a Secure, Remote Workplace Part 3 of a 5-part series of blogs on how to create a secure remote workplace.
Businesses have always been reluctant to facilitate remote work for their employees since they have considered the physical workplace to be the ultimate makerspace. One of the reasons behind this reluctance is due to the major challenge around how to measure productivity when working from home.
However, IBM proved to be a change agent since the early 1980s, when the tech giant installed remote terminals at selected employees’ homes. By 2009, when remote work was still, for most, a novelty, 40% of IBM’s 386,000 global employees already worked at home (the company noted that it had reduced its office space by 78 million square feet and saved about $100 million in the US annually as a result).— Quartz
In 2017, IBM ended work from home policy, and the news came as a bolt from the blue. IBM intended to make agile teams work, which they thought was only possible when the teams centralized in the office hubs. Fast forward to today, COVID-19 has left almost every business across the globe with Hobson’s choice — remote work or nothing at all.