Flexible Work Arrangement Week
The first week in May is Flexible Work Arrangement week, promoting experimentation with rearranged work schedules and locations outside of the conventional office setting.
To celebrate, members of the FlexPaths team offer their ideas for flexing your work arrangements this week. We hope that these will inspire you to embrace flexible work this week if you don’t already. And if you are already a flexible worker? We hope you’ll take the opportunity to encourage others to flex their work this week, as well.
Meryl Rosenthal, CEO:
Encourage managers to extend on site coverage of their teams while promoting flex work. Every Friday, have team members decide if they want to start two hours earlier or later to avoid peak commute times. Promote it as a win win for the company and its customers.
Clare Flynn Levy, Managing Director, UK:
Ask your team to each spend an hour thinking about what their ideal work arrangement would actually be, assuming that their role didn’t change, but if “face time” wasn’t an issue and/or there was no concern about career progression being jeopardized. How would their work be affected? How would the team be affected? Then sit down, as a team, and spend an hour reviewing them together. Are any of the “ideal world” scenarios actually both possible and win-win for the team member and the company? If so, why not give them a shot?
Sandy Burud, PhD, Principal:
Pick some jobs that seem ‘inflexible’, like administrative assistant positions — and think about how they can be restructured to make more flexibility possible. Better yet, have the people in those jobs – not just the individual, but the team as a whole — think about how to use technology, restructure responsibilities and how to collaborate in new ways, to allow for flexible scheduling and remote work. The process itself – besides leading to good ideas – helps the whole team buy in to the solution.
Meryl Rosenthal, CEO:
Be proactive.. If you have an employee who you believe can work well in a flex arrangement and it will be a win-win for him/her and the business, suggest it. The increased productivity, engagement and simply goodwill will be well worth it.
Karol Rose, Principal:
Try a flex simulation as a way to help managers and employees get comfortable with managing/working remotely. Invite employees who would like to work remotely some or all of the time and their managers to participate in a remote work simulation where they work away from each other in another part of the building or different office for one month. The ‘rule’ is they cannot have ‘face time’ during this period. Managers need to provide guidance about deliverables and performance without seeing their employees. Employees need to decide what kind of support they need and how best to do their jobs without the usual office resources. Both need to figure out what’s required to make remote work a success in terms of technology and business ‘etiquette’ for things like meetings, client or co-worker needs, etc. They should debrief during the month to determine what’s working and what needs to be fixed. The simulation is a way to practice remote work before committing to doing it all or some of the time.
Kelly Gouteix, Sales:
Flexibility doesn’t have to be an “all or nothing” proposition. Sometimes just working flexibly once or twice a week might be all that you need. With a strong action plan in place for how you will get your work done, you can reassure your manager that you’ve thought through the company’s best interests as well as your own.
Meryl Rosenthal, CEO:
Attention all CEOs. We just had ‘Take Your Sons & Daughters To Work Day’. Follow that up by encouraging parents to visit their child(ren)’s school so the experience can be shared in the classroom and have the parents use the rest of the day to work offsite. Have them share the experience with you.
Robin Roschke, COO:
We know you want to flex … but cross the chasm and improve productivity through flexible work. Start by test driving your company’s tools. Here are some ideas:
- Set aside a half of day and declare NO emails unless you need to send an attachment. Want to reach a colleague? Send an IM.
- Schedule a meeting- a VIRTUAL one….insist that everyone be in a different location and turn the video webcam on; share a document and collaborate in real time.
- Got wikis? Identify a topic that you want the team’s weigh in and capture it via online discussion threads, encourage folks to tag their content too!
Jessica Smith, Marketing:
Try rearranging your schedule to avoid the longer commute times. Arrive 1-2 hours earlier and leave 1-2 hours earlier. If you have a meeting later in the day, try calling in during your commute home (using a hands-free device) or video conference once you’re home.