Press release

Over Half of US Employees Say That a Work from Home Policy Would Seriously Harm Productivity

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Wrike, the most versatile collaborative work management platform, today released data from its new preparedness survey, Remote Work Survey: Productivity Measurement Amidst COVID-19, detailing how workers felt about their employers’ preparedness for extended remote work as a large part of the country shifts to work remotely. Nearly half of workers (49%) say they had never worked from home prior to the outbreak of COVID-19. An additional 23% say they only work from home during special circumstances, such as caring for sick kids or during extreme weather events.

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Are employers underreacting or overreacting to COVID-19? (Graphic: Business Wire)

Are employers underreacting or overreacting to COVID-19? (Graphic: Business Wire)

A significant number of workers felt uneasy about working from home, with 43% of professionals noting that they don’t believe they can do their jobs as effectively when compared to working out of their office. As a large segment of full-time employees are being forced to work remotely due to COVID-19, the results point to a disruptive experience for this pool of employees new to working from home.

For virtual collaboration, old school tools still rule the workplace

Technology has the ability to help connect teams and foster collaboration; however, despite the proliferation in recent years of real-time communication tools, email reigns as the most common tool used for virtual collaboration (85%), followed by voice conferencing (67%). Just over 50% of respondents report using video conferencing, and just over 45% said they use messaging platforms. Collaborative Work Management (CWM) platforms, which include tools for virtual project and task management, are used by just over 10%.

Remote work across generations

Millennials were 44% more likely than baby boomers to say that they could do their jobs just as effectively from home. This could be because they are digital natives and more comfortable adopting and using the technology available to them. Boomers, by contrast, were 51% more likely than millennials and 19% more likely than Gen-X to say they “strongly disagree” that they could do their jobs from home.

Other key findings include:

  • 40% of survey respondents disagreed that their company has the technology to enable work from home if necessary

    • Millennials had the most positive outlook: 20% were more likely than boomers to agree their company’s tech could support a period of mandated work from home.
  • Over 30% said they aren’t sure how their organizations assess remote worker productivity.

    • A quarter of respondents say it’s up to each manager to evaluate the productivity of their employees.
    • Only 11% say that there’s technology in place, which may show that for those who do work remotely, the experience is treated casually by employers.
  • Over a quarter (26%) of Millennials said their employer is underreacting to the COVID-19 threat. Just 18% of Gen-Xers and 12% of Baby Boomers say the same.

“The findings of this survey offer some hopeful insights, but there are also some serious red flags regarding the readiness of employers to mandate a work from home policy,” said Andrew Filev, founder and CEO at Wrike.

“We see a clear need for more businesses to move beyond email as the primary means of internal collaboration so that their employees will have better alignment and faster communication while working remotely. There’s also a massive need for investment in tools that can empower workers to do their best work from anywhere – at home or in the office. This unprecedented public health crisis is going to be a trial by fire for companies that haven’t previously invested in remote work, but those who have already built a culture around virtual collaboration should be well-positioned to execute and keep employees engaged and productive.”

To enable companies to work more effectively in remote environments, Wrike is offering its Pro plan free for six months to new customers.

Methodology

Wrike’s research was conducted using a sample size of 1,000 respondents in the United States. The research targeted individuals employed full-time by organizations of more than 200 employees. The online survey was conducted between March 11th and 12th, 2020 with a margin of error 3%. In some instances, totals in this document may not add up to 100% due to rounding. Members of Generation Z were included in the survey, but were omitted from generational analysis due to small sample size.

About Wrike

Wrike is the only collaborative work management platform for the enterprise that can be easily configured for any department, team, or work style – all in a single digital workplace. The Wrike platform completes the cloud collaboration toolbox and transforms how work is done by allowing all teams to focus their attention on what matters most. Dedicated to making teams insanely productive, Wrike puts teams in control of their digital workflows to enable maximum potential and accelerate business growth. Founded in 2006 and headquartered in Silicon Valley, Wrike is the partner of choice for more than 18,000 organizations, including Hootsuite, Tiffany & Co., and Ogilvy, and two million users across 140 countries.