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Analysis: Remote working is the new normal for many, but it comes with hidden risks

18 March 2020

PhD researcher Dave Cook (果冻影院 Anthropology) provides insights from his new research to help newly remote workers manage the common hurdles during the Covid-19 outbreak.

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Many of us have had little choice but to resort to remote working in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. It is just days since听,听听were making headlines by ordering their employees to work from home, but you could now say the same about lots of companies.

Whatever you think about this style of working, the trend is increasing. Remote working was already growing fast 鈥撎齭ince 2005 to 4.7 million workers in the US, for example. If you believe听, the transition is all too easy and seamless.

Yet the march towards this utopian future has been uneven 鈥 witness IBM鈥檚 decision to dump remote working several years ago,听听it was preventing innovation and collaboration. I have just听听that highlights additional challenges and difficulties. And if people don鈥檛 approach remote working in the right way, they risk making their work lives worse.

Pros and cons

When discussing remote working, academics and the media have been split into opposing camps. The pro camp听听cuttng out commutes, increasing quality family time and productivity and achieving a better work-life balance. Sceptics听听flexibility comes at a cost. They warn about losing social interaction, nuance and community 鈥 and potentially becoming less productive. These give us mixed messages when we need certainty.

As an anthropologist, I鈥檝e spent the past four years听听people adjusted to becoming an extreme type of remote worker known as听. These workers move from country to country, always working online. I followed more than 50 in total, employed in a range of jobs including computer coding, graphic design, online marketing and travel journalism.

After an initial honeymoon period, remote working quickly became too isolating for over 25% of my participants. As one said, 鈥淪ome aren鈥檛 naturally self-motivated, and no end of self-help books will change that鈥.

One solution turned out to be the听. It gave a sense of community and face-to-face interaction, but more important was just to be around other workers 鈥 academic jargon for this is听. As a remote employee working in ecommerce explained: 鈥淛ust being around other folk working turbocharges your day.鈥

I completely understand this sentiment. I wrote most of this article in a coworking space, and just being around others听听at their keyboards creates a feeling of effortless productivity.

Yet things change quickly. Coworking spaces are not going to be an option for many people for a while. Some of those in house shares will be able to recreate the same environment at home. There are various forms of coworking space etiquette that can be adopted at home, such as having quiet zones for focused work and having separate areas for voice and video calls.

Digital discipline

If working near other people is important, the need for a disciplined work life is everything. For my research participants, this was the secret ingredient in sustaining remote working 鈥 whether the discipline was听听or externally set by听.

My participants never discussed discipline at first. The initial excitement of remote working made them productive for a while. But after a few months, motivation became harder. At this point, some participants gave up on this lifestyle.

Those who thrived tended to be more strict, ensuring they went to coworking spaces every day and put phones and social media noise out of reach. Many also set up rituals. One graphic designer deliberately chose to work in a space that was 15 minutes walk from their home, to 鈥渕entally gear up for work鈥 on his way in and to decompress before he got home.

Fascinatingly, here was a worker who had not only given up one office for another, but was recreating the daily commute. And just because coworking spaces are off limits at the moment it doesn鈥檛 mean you can鈥檛 consider equivalent rituals. It is still an option to build a short walk into the beginning and end of the working day, thereby creating a clear division between your home and work life.

Always on, always available

Digital technology may free people to work remotely in the first place, but it also causes unforeseen problems. My participants reported a growing expectation to be available 24/7, reflecting听听颈苍听.

This is an issue for the entire workforce, but it is arguably exacerbated by remote working. Our 24/7 work culture didn鈥檛 happen overnight, or because of coercive managers. Instead, the perceived division between work and non-work has steadily disappeared over time, while few of us were paying attention.

Sociologist Judy Wajcman argues that this mentality is听听how we think about time, as Silicon Valley designs devices and apps that urge us all on a never-ending quest for productivity and self-discipline. Besides work, the ways in which we read books, watch TV, exercise and meditate can now be timeboxed into app-sized chunks as well.

听has led some remote workers to experience mental health issues and burnout. Reflecting back on his burnout, one interviewee called Sam explained: I didn鈥檛 have the concept of free time until I found myself scheduling four-hour meetings in my diary titled 鈥榙owntime鈥. It鈥檚 insane; I look back at this period in my life and wonder why it took so long to burnout.

We all need to keep an eye on this dangerous trend. It is crucial to set clear boundaries between home life and work and not put pressure on ourselves to be available outside working hours 鈥 particularly during a crisis when many of us will need to support family and friends.

Finally, remote working could well become permanent for many people. Many companies were encouraging staff to work elsewhere to reduce office costs before the outbreak, and this will probably be all the more attractive to the businesses that survive this crisis. One wonders if in ten years we will look back from our remote workstations and remember 2020 as the year we last went into the office. Either way, we need to be careful. Remote working always tantalises with the promise of freedom, but it can end up delivering the exact opposite.

This article first appeared in The Conversation.

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