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Trends in the Workplace: It’s All About Time - Carolina Parent
Trends in the Workplace: It’s All About Time
By Sheryl Grant — CarolinaParent.com
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money would be nice, and medical benefits and vacation time go without
saying. But at the top of the list, parents want a company that offers
some kind of workplace flexibility. They want to tinker with the
40-hour workweek so it can better mesh with family life, whether that
means telecommuting, job sharing, part-time work or compressed
workweeks, or any arrangement that mutually benefits the company and
employee.
In an interview with Andrea Kay, an expert on workplace issues, I
asked if companies were moving toward nontraditional work arrangements
in greater numbers. With the surge in technology, which allows
flexibility in other parts of our lives, surely there must be more
flexibility in the workplace as well. But Kay, author of four books and
more than 900 articles on the workforce since 1988, wasn’t quick to
agree.
“For some companies, [alternative work arrangements] have been part
of their overall strategy, or policy, for years,” Kay says, “and they
think about how to be good employers. For other companies, they aren’t
there yet.”
Twelve years ago, Kay wrote about job sharing, but as a
wide-sweeping trend, companies have been slow to offer a menu of
alternative possibilities to their employees.
“People are becoming more needy for it,” she says, meaning
flexibility in the workplace. “Demands have increased on workloads.
People have had to take on more — much more — and they want less demand
on their time.” This workload creep persists from office to home.
“There’s a much greater need to respond to business outside the office.
Taking phone calls on vacation, in the middle of the night … there’s so
much accessibility to connect and contact people, and people are
inundated.”
And there’s little relief at home. Many parents juggle
extracurricular activities, and lots of them. Work can seep into home
life through e-mail, laptops and cell phones, and parents also fill
personal time to capacity with extra demands.
“Parents aren’t just trying to come home for dinner like the old
days,” Kay says. “Kids do more outside interests, have more choices,
and that creates a time frenzy.” Something has to give.
A Flexible Arrangement
Anna Millar and Meghan Gosk would agree that days can be hectic.
Presented with the option of scaling back work hours or sacrificing
something in the family schedule, Millar and Gosk chose a flexible work
arrangement. On Mondays, Tuesdays and half the day on Wednesdays,
Millar is the M.B.A. program associate director at UNC’s Kenan-Flagler
Business School. On Thursdays and Fridays she is home with her four
children, Ben, 9; twins Ally and Chris, 7; and Will, 2.
Gosk has a similar schedule, but in reverse. On Mondays and
Tuesdays she’s home with her two daughters, Taylor, 8, and Kelley, 6,
and on the other days she is, like Anna, the M.B.A. program associate
director. Both women share an office, a job title, a schedule and an
e-mail address. On Wednesdays when their schedules overlap, each one
occupies separate desks in their shared office.
“Today is usually an Anna day,” Millar explains during an interview
on a Monday. “But we planned meetings today so we both came in.”
On “Meghan days,” Millar can expect to talk with her co-worker
several times throughout the day, and the same for Gosk on “Anna days.”
When asked if they could work this way without e-mail or cell phones,
they answer in unison, “Absolutely not.”
Their co-workers agree that a common e-mail address and excellent
communication skills make the arrangement possible. And according to
their boss, Michael Stipanek, Millar and Gosk bring a full-time
approach to their part-time positions. Win-win.
When asked for a list of activities their kids do, Millar
recommends that I sit down. Together, Gosk’s two kids and Millar’s four
participate in ice hockey, soccer, swim team, gymnastics, theater,
piano lessons, lacrosse, baseball, basketball, Sunday school and Girl
Scouts. The phrase “work-life balance” seems too hollow for the
bounding, high-speed pace of their weekly schedules.
What Working Parents Need
What, exactly, is work-life balance? Most parents would settle for
anything less than total exhaustion, so the idea of balance might feel
a touch greedy. But according to the Families and Work Institute
(www.whenworkworks.org), employees are working more hours than they did
25 years ago. And over the same 25-year period, the number of workers
who felt they could not accomplish what they needed to get done during
the workweek rose from 40 percent in 1977 to 52 percent in 2002. More
time at work can only mean less time with family, and in the 2002
National Study of the Changing Workforce, also conducted by the
Families and Work Institute, researchers discovered that 67 percent of
all parents say they don’t have enough time with their children.
Focusing on flexibility is our generation’s way of asking for a
correction. Economists point out that the average modern family has to
work harder to achieve the same standard of living our parents did a
generation ago. In focus groups and other research, Families and Work
Institute found that to reduce work-life conflict, workers were most
likely to “ask for greater workplace flexibility.”
A Carolina Parenting Inc. survey showed that North Carolinians feel
the same way. Each year, Carolina Parenting (publisher of Carolina
Parent, Charlotte Parent and Piedmont Parent magazines) honors 40
family-friendly companies in North Carolina. This year, in addition to
the Family-Friendly 40 nominations, we asked our readers to take a
survey. More than 1,000 readers responded, providing information about
the benefits employees value the most. On-site day care, adoption
benefits, lactation rooms, dry cleaning or movie rental — we wanted to
know what our readers cared about the most at work.
The survey was a joint effort with Balancing Professionals, a
Triangle-based company that advises businesses about the changing
workplace and helps connect professionals with alternative work
arrangements. We posted a simple survey online from April through July
of 2007 and discovered that, among other things, many North Carolina
parents valued flexibility in the workplace. Results showed that 60
percent of highly educated workers (college degree or higher) would
leave their current job for a position that offered more flexibility,
and flexibility was ranked as the top reason why these employees would
leave their jobs. For highly educated professionals not in the
workforce, finding a position with flexibility was the top priority for
returning to work. (To view the full results of the survey, visit
www.carolinaparent.com.)
Creative Solutions and Options
Kella Hatcher and Maryanne Perrin, co-founders of Balancing
Professionals, help advise companies on workplace trends. “If employers
want to catch up with today’s workforce, who rank work-life balance as
a top career priority, they need to get creative about how, when and
where work gets done,” Hatcher says.
In fact, a recent Pew Research Center survey discovered that only
21 percent of working mothers with children younger than 18 viewed
full-time work as the best arrangement, down from 32 percent in 1997.
Sixty percent said a part-time job would be best, up from 48 percent 10
years ago. The study did not detail other work arrangements, although
part time tends to be the most common workplace option offered, even in
companies that don’t consider work-life issues to be a priority.
According to Hatcher and Perrin, one of the best examples of a
creative workplace is R.O.W.E., or Results Only Work Environment, made
famous by Best Buy. “Employees are encouraged to work when and where
they like, and aren’t obligated to work a set number of hours, as long
as they get the job done,” Perrin says. Technology has largely made
this kind of arrangement possible, and while it took training and
planning to create wide-reaching change, Best Buy reaped rewards. “They
saw a 35 percent increase in productivity, dramatic decrease in
turnover, increase in management performance and customer satisfaction
— all of which benefit their bottom line,” Hatcher says.
Flexibility doesn’t mean that everyone wants to job-share or work
part time; it means employees want options. They want to figure out a
schedule that helps them get the job done, both at work and at home.
Not everyone can afford to scale back hours and pay. But some employees
— highly experienced and valued workers — may want the ability to work
from home, or to compress the workweek and free up a day or two.
Andrea Kay, noting that more and more employees want flexible work
arrangements, agreed that companies will have to adjust the way they
manage their workforce. “But you still have to present yourself as a
problem-solver,” she says. “Companies still want a level of expertise,
communication skills, people skills, a good work ethic. It’s a hard
package to find.”
When it comes to getting and keeping a good job, being a valuable employee is one trend that will never change.
Finding Flexibility
A few companies specialize in matching employees with alternative work arrangements:
Balancing Professionals (www.balancingprofessionals.com) is a niche
and advisory staffing firm that connects businesses with a unique pool
of high-caliber professionals who seek part-time or job-share
opportunities. Based in the Triangle.
Flex-Time Lawyers (www.flextimelawyers.org) is a national
consulting firm that advises the legal profession on work-life balance
and the retention and promotion of women attorneys. Also provides
recruiting services.
HR OptIn (www.hroptin.com) is a national company that helps human
resource professionals, specialists, administrators, managers,
directors and experts in human resource find flexible work arrangements
with Fortune 500 companies and more.
Mom Corps (www.momcorps.com) supplies top-tier professionals to
corporations on an as-needed basis, while enabling individuals seeking
flexibility to engage in challenging work. Based in Atlanta.
My Part-Time Pro (www.myparttimepro.com) helps accomplished and
educated individuals find meaningful flexible employment opportunities.
Currently based in New York and Philadelphia with plans to go national
by the end of 2007.
Last Updated 5 Year(s) ago
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