Originally Posted by
SoonerDave
Believe I heard that Best Buy is getting ready to release the same edict for its tech employees - no more virtual/telecommuting.
After thinking about this for a while, it suddenly dawned on my why this issue is really coming up. And its for a great deal simpler reasons that are being tossed around - heck, I feel stupid for not having realized it earlier myself. It has virtually nothing to do with all this corporate doublespeak BS about synergy and facetime and all that. It's about money.
One of the benefits most folks enjoy at any company if they've been there long enough is some form of vacation, sick day, paid time off, whatever you want to call it. From the business side, however, that's a huge cash liability - on any given day (well, pay period) a company has to be able to fork over a decent chunk of cash to pay for those paid days off. As a result, companies over the last several years have been working hard to encourage employees to burn those vacation hours, and get those hours off the books and reduce their liability. I didn't understand this myself until I worked for a smaller company one year who refused to TELL me how many vacation hours I had...I just asked for some time off, and they gave it to me. When I pressed the issue, I was given the runaround. Some else 'splained it to me later that the company didn't want to "commit" time off hours to anyone because of the way vacation has to be accounted for in the company books, so it was all "off the record."
So how does that tie into telecommuting? Let's 'splain/illustrate with a theoretical example.
Bob is a theoretical virtual worker with a company laptop, and can (and has) shown he can effectively work remotely even though most of the time he goes to a physical office. One day, Bob is expecting home delivery of, say, some legal documents for which he must sign. Because he's a virtual worker, he fires off an email to his peers/boss saying "Hey, I'm working from home today, if you need me, drop me an email." He works from home, receives his package, figures he spent an hour dealing with the documents once he received them, and "makes up" that hour. From his side, he's worked a legit full day. From the company's side, they've received a legit full day of work. Everyone's happy.
But here's the rub: For any other non-virtual employee, however, the Company has just lost a chance to "burn" a day of vacation off the books. In any other non-telecommuting circumstance, Bob has to take some sort of paid leave, such as vacation, paid time off, whatever, to accommodate that package delivery. That's (presumably) 8 hours off the company's books as a cash liability that Bob can exercise later and the company still has to pay at some point on the future. The net result is that, from a certain perspective, the telecommuting option effectively gives him more leave time.
I have no doubt that the bean counters at Yahoo (and other places) have started to realize that telecommuters burn leave time much more slowly than their non-telecommuting counterparts. Extend the reasons for an ad-hoc day of telecommuting - kids are sick, furniture's being delivered, have to wait for a plumber, A/C repairman is on his way, cable is out - and you start seeing all manner of ways the telecommuting option works out to slow the rate of burn-down for paid time off. It is not about the worker "stealing" time from the company - its about the nature of telecommuting affording its users more options in how they work their day.
And there's a sidebar that also probably scares companies just a bit, too. If you even remotely accept the notion that the process described above affords certain employees "more" leave time even though the Company Handbook says everyone gets the same, you open up an entirely new can of worms: does the opportunity to be a virtual worker create a defacto form of discrimination based solely on whether you have broadband Internet access, which is all-but a requirement for telecommuting in many/most cases. And that notion, however remote, perks up the ears of the lawyers - Bob gets to telecommute because he lives in an area that supports higher-speed internet connection. Jane doesn't get to because she lives in an area of town, or perhaps an apartment complex (whatever) that doesn't. HR departments hate sticky wickets like that.
So, rather than face these issues, the simpler and cheaper solution for the company is simply to shut it down entirely, making up all manner of tinfoil-in-the-radar reasons why. But don't be fooled. Its about money.
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