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Rosabeth Moss Kanter to President Obama: Push Telecommuting

April 22nd, 2009 @ 6:15 am

3 Comments

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: Car, Barack Obama, Telecommuting, Government, Gender And Diversity, Human Resources, Workforce Management, Sean Silverthorne

President Obama has a complex, multifaceted agenda that encompasses everything from climate change to increasing American competitiveness.

And now Harvard Business School professor Rosabeth Moss Kannter has a one-stop solution that will help him advance many of his goals: Make it economically feasible and corporately acceptable for people to work at home one day a week. She says:

“That single step could raise productivity, save energy, decrease pollution, reduce traffic congestion, cut household expenses, increase quality of family life, and keep educated women in the work force.”

What is the role of government in making this happen? Government leaders must encourage businesses to actively support the idea of working remotely, and also develop incentives for high-speed technology infrastructure to be extended from office to home.

“To reinvent the work place, we need public officials to put the infrastructure and permission in place, companies to start the change process, and people to learn how to work together with new norms.”

As someone who commutes almost three hours a day to and from Boston, I can see how even just a one-day-a-week, work-from-home situation would reduce car maintenance and repair expenses significantly, and probably increase productivity in some types of my work. Would my work-life balance be better? You’ll have to ask my wife if she wants me underfoot 20 percent more during the work week.

What about you? Is a government-encouraged telecommuting policy a good idea? Does your current work environment discourage working remotely?

Read Kanter’s full blog post Stay Home and Work on Harvard Business Publishing, then come back to give us your take.

 
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    1

    nancassidy

    04/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Rosabeth Moss Kanter to President Obama: Push Telecommuting

    I think it makes so much. I own my own business and work from home. My business is home based but is not all internet, I actually host workshops for songwriters in Nashville periodically which requires travel 3 hours from my home but it is really nice to be able to run my resource websites from my home. That allows me freedom to make sure the grandkids can participate in all activitites they are interested in.
    I have staff from Virginia Beach to Oregon and we conference daily. It is a great way to do business.
    Nan Cassidy
    President/CEO Tunesmith Enterprises

  •  
    2

    dmckinley225

    04/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Rosabeth Moss Kanter to President Obama: Push Telecommuting

    Ms Kanter's plea seems more appropriate for private sector CEO's than for our President. Unlike in the banking world, capital in the political world is limited. Many of us think that
    sharing a common workplace is essential to the formation and productive function of business organizations of all sorts. (Even in a knowledge economy the need for a tactile work community
    is in our human, cultural DNA). Presidential capital is better spent leading on issues of urban planning and land use development so that transportation systems and zoning incetives can accomodate the future workplace development.

  •  
    3

    telesaur_is_telework

    04/24/09 | Report as spam

    Telesaur

    US government has been increasing internal promotion of telework, and in some areas, requiring employees in telework-capable positions to do so. As a result, the number of federal teleworkers has been rising quickly.

    It would be great to see government encourage telecommuting in the commercial arena. I'd start increasing broadband accessibility.

    Find me talking about telework on Twitter: @telesaur


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