Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, businesses large and small are stating they're encouraging their employees to work remotely, but have they considered what needs to be done to make that happen? This article highlights several areas across the business that need to be considered in order for remote working to be effective.
Introduction to LPC - Facility Design And Re-Engineering
The Realities of Implementing a Remote Workforce
1. The Realities of Implementing a Remote Workforce
OVERVIEW
The COVID-19 pandemic is causing many businesses to rethink how their employees work. Across
the country, companies large and small have already stated that they will immediately implement a
work-from-home policy for their employees.
While that attitude is laudable, the reality is that converting a workforce from a traditional 9-to-5 in-
office model to a remote workforce is not as simple as it sounds, especially if it is being done on the
fly without any advance planning.
For remote workers to be able to work effectively and be productive there are numerous checks and
balances that need to be put in place in order to effectively safeguard the security of not only the
business, the network and data, but the employees as well.
IMPLEMENTING A REMOTE WORKFORCE
In the current situation, employers are already encouraging their employees to stay and work from
home. Employers may have heard of all the benefits that will accrue, both to the employee and the
employer, so from their perspective it is a win-win scenario. Benefits such as improved productivity,
reduced absenteeism, improved employee retention and better work-life balance all make it sound as
if having a remote workforce is the key to business success.
Unfortunately, the reality of implementing a remote workforce may not align with those beliefs, at least
not initially. While those benefits may ultimately result, the truth is that in the short term, and
especially in the situation that businesses are facing today, there may be more decreases in
2. productivity, more short-term increases in expenses, more layoffs, and more headcount and resource
shortfalls than previously experienced. This is because working remotely is not for everyone.
Employees who have never worked remotely often view that as something they’d like to do, but once
they begin, they find that the reality is often quite different. Remote workers must be self-managed,
self-driven and self-directed. They must be able to make their own decisions without having a
supervisor telling them what to do. They must be able to provide their own tech support. In short, they
must be totally and completely self-sufficient. For the employees who are comfortable in that type of
situation, working remotely is ideal. For those who are not, working remotely can be a nightmare.
Because of those differences, and to provide employers with an idea of just what is involved in
effectively deploying and managing a remote workforce, here are just a few of the items that
businesses must consider:
EMPLOYER CONCERNS
GENERAL
The guidelines and expectations for remote employees must be defined and clearly
communicated to all remote employees
All necessary policies and procedures to support and manage a remote workforce must be in
place
o This includes Accounting, Training, HR, Marketing, Payroll, Purchasing, IT, Tech support,
Productivity Tracking, Sales, Taxes, etc.
The employer must ensure all employees know how to use the appropriate tools to properly
record and report their remote activity, in what format, and how often
The employer must decide if all roles will done remotely, or will some still have to come into the
office
How do you manage a distributed workforce across multiple time zones and/or multiple
geographies
How will you deal with confidential data and information that remote employees may need to
access
Does business-critical data and information need to be scanned and digitized for remote access
Will onsite facility access by available if required
How will switchboard calls and functions be managed/rerouted
COMMUNICATIONS
There must be a method to communicate updates and changes to remote workers in a timely
manner
What are the communications and reporting protocols that must be followed
o Between the business and the employees
o Between the employees and their managers
o Between management and customers
o Between employees and customers
3. COLLABORATION & MEETINGS
Meetings
o How many and how often will be held
o What format will be used (conference call, video call, webinar)
o Who must attend, who is optional
Collaboration tools
o Is there a corporate standard collaboration tool
o Does everyone have it and know how to use it
EMPLOYEE CONCERNS
TOOLS & EQUIPMENT
Do employees have the necessary equipment, hardware and software needed to work remotely
Equipment may include
o Chair
o Desk
o Table
o Lights
o Power strips
o White boards
o Etc.
Hardware may include
o Desktop or laptop computers
o Monitors
o Docking stations
o Desktop phones
o Cell phones
o Headsets
o Bluetooth earphones
o Printers
o Mouse
o Routers
o Switches
o Projectors
o Video cameras
o Web cam
o Etc.
Software may include
o Whatever office productivity suite your business uses (such as Office365 or G Suite)
o Any proprietary business software your business requires
o Security software (firewall, antivirus, VPN)
o Login credentials
o Authentication software and tokens
o Soft phones (VOIP)
o Video call software
4. o Communications software
o Collaboration tools (such as Webex, Zoom or Slack)
o IM
o Design
o Layout
o CAD/CAM
o CRM
o CMS
o Marketing automation
o Etc.
PURCHASING
Who will order the equipment, hardware and software for the employees
o If the employee must do it, is there a standard setup to order
o Is there one SKU for the entire standard package, or does each component need to be
ordered separately
Is there one supplier to contact or are there multiple suppliers to choose from
Will all equipment, hardware, software be delivered to the employee or will the employee need to
pick it up
Is there a corporate account employees can use to pay for it, or do they order it themselves and
are reimbursed
o If they are reimbursed, are the processes and procedures in place to deal with that
Who will install, set up and maintain all equipment, hardware and software for the employees
o Working from home means being able to be self-sufficient to a large degree, but many
people have never done that and do not know how
Who will train the employees how to use the tools and equipment
o If a person has never worked from home, they may not know how to set up, access and
use a VPN, how to log in remotely, etc.
What do employees do when their hardware doesn’t work, they can’t get the software configured,
they can’t connect to the VPN, etc.
IT DEPARTMENT CONCERNS
HEADCOUNT
Are there enough people to support the remote workforce
INFRASTRUCTURE
Are there enough servers to support the remote workforce
Is the network robust enough to maintain the required uptime
Does the network have enough bandwidth
Is there a standard hardware and software package (i.e., a standard image) that all remote
workers must have/use