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2022

Why Employers Should Lean Into Remote Work as a Perk

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There is an ongoing debate in Corporate America about the appropriate future for remote work. Some employers feel remote work detracts from productivity and collaboration, and many have already brought their staff back to the office for good.

On the other hand, other employers believe remote work hasn’t had a negative impact on productivity and that it leads to happier workers, which makes it a net positive.

Remote Work Likely Here to Stay

Still others see remote work as so ingrained in the mindset and expectations of the broader workforce that it’s simply a foregone conclusion that it’s here to stay, no matter what employers might want.

ClearPath, in partnership with Remote, released a new report at the end of September with a comprehensive view on modern workplace benefits. The findings cover how employees rate their current packages, what benefits Gen Z cares about the most, and the benefits that stand out in today’s job market, and the report’s results help quantify some of these sentiments.

Workers Expect Remote Work to Be the Norm

The report found that 62% of decision makers expect remote work to become more common over the next five years, and 69% of employees feel the same.

Employers who are bound and determined to bring staff back to the office may face an uphill battle in the face of such sentiments. Expectations have a strong influence on future reality, and these data lend support to the argument that remote work is too embedded to go away.

Flexibility Top of Mind When Choosing Jobs

Expectations suggest a baseline requirement for workers to even consider taking a job with a particular employer. For many workers, remote work may ultimately become a bare minimum expectation of any job offer, if it hasn’t already become such an expectation.

But remote work addresses some life goals of many employees as well. The right amount of flexibility can be more important to some workers than financial compensation. That makes flexibility a potentially powerful and efficient recruitment and retention tool for employers willing and able to provide it.

Workers Would Leave for Greater Flexibility

Consider, for example, the finding from the ClearPath/Remote study that 54 percent of Gen Z workers say they would consider switching jobs to relocate abroad. Further, the report found that, 57 percent of remote and hybrid workers who responded to the study’s survey ranked flexibility as more important than compensation.

While some employers remain skeptical of remote work, employees broadly expect the ability to work remotely as a core requirement for a job. While this doesn’t necessarily mean employers have no choice in the matter, they should be as open as possible to remote work as an option for some employees, particularly star performers for whom flexibility is a critical benefit.

Lin Grensing-Pophal is a Contributing Editor at HR Daily Advisor.

The post Why Employers Should Lean Into Remote Work as a Perk appeared first on HR Daily Advisor.




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