Telecommuting levels the field for some rural Minnesotans
by Jennifer Vogel, Minnesota Public Radio
March 24, 2011
St. Paul, Minn. — Rose Buer commutes to her job as a software engineer in Bloomington every morning.
But she doesn't drive from Minneapolis or St. Paul or another suburb. She makes the short trek from her 10-acre farm to a small office in Dawson, next to a hair salon and the Dawson Sentinel, the newspaper that serves the town of 1,300 people in western Minnesota.
From there, thanks to a DSL Internet connection, she telecommutes to her job at PPT Vision, a company that designs electronic monitoring systems for assembly lines.
Buer and her husband, Brett, moved to their country 1912 foursquare house from the Twin Cities seven years ago. Both were raised in rural Minnesota and longed to return. They've planted a garden and are planning a fruit orchard. "It's the best of both worlds," says Buer, who rents her Dawson office for $100 per month. "From 8 to 4, my head is in technical stuff. I can use my abilities as an engineer. After hours, I have the country farm life."
At first, Buer's employer was skeptical; it cut Buer's hours to three days per week. But after two months, she was back to full time, with full benefits and full city salary.
"I don't know where else I'd have an engineering job out here," Buer says. If she chose to live on the farm but didn't have telecommuting as an option, "I don't know if I'd be working at a dime store or what."
All over Minnesota — from Cook County in the northeast to Sibley County in the south — public and private entities are contemplating or building high-speed Internet networks.
Rural communities, dying for success stories like Buer's, are hoping that better connectivity will make it feasible for more people to live and work farther from the city. They hope it'll stave off a pattern of out-migration that's been draining young people from their towns and farms for a century.
Eighteen state broadband projects have received more than $228 million in federal stimulus dollars. Other communities are pushing ahead on their own in an effort to make Internet access faster and more universal than the private marketplace has so far. For example, Buer at first considered working her job from the farm, but a sluggish connection made that impossible.
"This is the only thing that's going to help stem the decline in rural areas," says Mark Erickson, the city administrator in Winthrop who is championing a publicly-owned, non-stimulus-funded broadband project in Sibley County. He says Sibley is ripe for telecommuting because it's only an hour and a half from the Twin Cities. "Broadband has the ability to grow this state," he says.
It's hard to measure the extent to which better Internet service will change the rural economic landscape. Certainly there's more at stake than telecommuting — farms and other businesses can use the web to access markets; faster connections can improve rural healthcare through telemedicine and education through interactive video classes.
But communities have reason to think broadband could level the playing field, especially with the growing number of workers not tethered to a desk. A recent study by ConnectMinnesota and the Minnesota Broadband Task Force found that 37 percent of Minnesotans work from home at least occasionally; twenty percent telework on a regular basis. What's more, the report says, "Three out of ten Minnesota adults who are not currently in the workforce say they would work if empowered to do so through teleworking. This includes 17% of retirees, nearly three out of five unemployed adults, and almost one-third of homemakers."
A 2009 report by Forrester Research predicts those numbers will grow: "Fueled by broadband adoption, better collaboration tools, and growing management experience," by 2016, 43 percent of American workers will work from home at least one day per week.
It's unclear what portion of those telecommuters will pick up stakes and move to the country. Ben Winchester, a University of Minnesota sociologist who studies rural areas, thinks good Internet service isn't so much a pull as its lack is a deterrent. "Broadband is not necessarily a draw," says Winchester. Rather, he says, "If it doesn't exist, it's a push factor. It pushes people away."
At least for some, however, broadband and all its attending technologies — video conferencing, virtual private networks (VPNs), instant messaging — is making rural life possible.
Mike Bubany works as a financial analyst from his 21-acre property in Spring Valley, south of the Twin Cities, for David Drown Associates in Minneapolis. "The commute is hellacious," says Bubany. "I have to walk down the stairs and kick the toys out of the way. I put on the coffee." He adds, "I am wearing a sweatshirt and jeans right now and not because it's casual Friday." He goes to the Minneapolis office just a few times a year.
Tom Wirt and Betsy Price run Clay Coyote, a successful pottery shop outside Hutchinson, west of the Twin Cities, featuring hand-glazed tagines and other cookware. The couple moved from the Chicago area, where Tom worked in marketing for Bakers Square, to their 55-acre farm 16 years ago. Since then, they have honed their pottery skills.
Their big break came thanks to the Internet. "An editor at Food & Wine magazine had ordered one of our colanders online," recalls Wirt. That editor recommended Clay Coyote to Paula Wolfert, a well-known cookbook author. "She was writing a book about cooking in southwest France and we made a cassole for her." From there, Wirt and Price became consultants on Wolfert's book about Mediterranean clay pot cooking.
"It blew the top off our business," says Wirt. He and his wife have become stars of the foodie world, racking up their best sales ever last year. More than half their orders came through Coyote's website; they shipped pots to Israel, Germany, Australia and England. "Without high-speed Internet, none of this would exist," says Wirt. "It's absolutely critical. Without it, we would be potters doing art shows."
In 2009, the state Department of Transportation and the U of M launched a campaign called eWorkPlace to encourage employers to allow more staff to work remotely. The idea was that fewer commuters would mean less highway congestion during rush hours. Since its debut, the program has found that telecommuting leads to increased productivity, fewer sick days and decreased overhead costs.
One of the companies that participated in the eWorkPlace project is MMIC, an Edina-based provider of medical IT services and liability insurance. MMIC has been pushing its employees to work from home since 2009, according to Steven DuBois, a senior risk management consultant. He says 40 percent of the company's workforce telecommutes at least one day a week — and some telecommute full time — saving over $1 million in office rent alone.
"We closed an office in Plymouth," he says. "We moved to a smaller office facility." MMIC offers what are known as "hotel cubes" to its workers when they're in the city, which may be as infrequently as twice a month.
DuBois himself telecommutes full time from Appleton, Wisconsin, thanks to a cable Internet connection. "One of the requirements," he says, "is that employees have access to broadband or cable. We do have one person who is working on a satellite hookup," he says. "But it's inconsistent. It's not as reliable as a hard connection at this point. I'm not aware that any of our folks have a wireless system where they are."
MMIC represents the future, according to Adeel Lari, a research fellow at the Humphrey School of Public Affairs who directs the eWorkPlace program. He believes that more and more workers — no longer bound to the city for jobs — will move to the country.
"Most of the jobs in the United States are becoming knowledge-based," he says. "The percentage will go up and up. Can you imagine the implication for where people live?"
Those underwater on their mortgages may be stuck in place for the short term, Lari says, but eventually, "I think the suburbs and exurbs will have a serious problem. People who want to move out of the city can move way out." Instead of stopping in, say, Eden Prairie, they may go all the way to Grand Marais. "At the present time, they may be tethered to the center city, but that will break away."
There used to be a stigma to working from home, Lari adds. "I think that stigma is lifting. Everything is done electronically. People ask for your email address, not your physical address anymore. I believe we are at the tipping point," he says. "We're on the cusp."
Friday, March 25, 2011
Friday, March 18, 2011
Minnesota House File No. 1141 Telework Bill
H.F. No. 1141, as introduced - 87th Legislative Session (2011-2012) Posted on Mar 16, 2011
1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to taxation; creating a teleworking credit; providing a sales tax
1.3exemption for telework expenses;amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section
1.4297A.67, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
1.5Statutes, chapter 290.
1.6BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
1.7 Section 1. [290.0693] TELEWORKING CREDIT.
1.8 Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) The terms in this section have the meanings given
1.9them.
1.10(b) "Eligible telework expenses" means expenses incurred during the calendar year
1.11pursuant to a telework agreement, up to a limit of $1,200 for each participating employee,
1.12to enable a participating employee to begin to telework. Eligible expenses:
1.13(1) include, but are not limited to, expenses paid or incurred to purchase computers;
1.14computer-related hardware and software; modems; data processing equipment;
1.15telecommunications equipment; high-speed Internet connectivity equipment; computer
1.16security software and devices; and all related delivery, installation, and maintenance fees;
1.17(2) do not include:
1.18(i) replacement costs for computers, computer-related hardware and software,
1.19modems, data processing equipment, telecommunications equipment, or computer
1.20security software and devices at the principal place of business when that equipment is
1.21relocated to the telework site; and
1.22(ii) expenses for which a credit or subtraction is claimed under any other provision
1.23of this chapter;
1.24(3) may be incurred only once per employee; and
2.1(4) may be incurred directly by the employer on behalf of the participating employee
2.2or directly by the participating employee and subsequently reimbursed by the employer.
2.3(c) "Employer" means any employer subject to tax under this chapter.
2.4(d) "Participating employee" means an employee who has entered into a telework
2.5agreement with the employee's employer on or after July 1, 2011. Participating employee
2.6does not include an individual who is self-employed or an individual who ordinarily
2.7spends a majority of the workday at a location other than the employer's principal place of
2.8business.
2.9(e) "Telework" means to perform normal and regular work functions on a workday
2.10that ordinarily would be performed at the employer's principal place of business at a
2.11different location, thereby eliminating or substantially reducing the physical commute
2.12to and from that employer's principal place of business. Telework shall not include
2.13home-based businesses, extensions of the workday, or work performed on a weekend
2.14or holiday.
2.15(f) "Telework agreement" means an agreement signed by the employer and the
2.16participating employee, on or after July 1, 2011, that defines the terms of a telework
2.17arrangement, including the number of days per year the participating employee will
2.18telework in order to qualify for the credit as provided in subdivision 2, and any restrictions
2.19on the place from which the participating employee will telework.
2.20(g) "Telework assessment" means an optional assessment leading to the development
2.21of policies and procedures necessary to implement a formal telework program that would
2.22qualify the employer for the credit provided in subdivision 2, including but not limited
2.23to a workforce profile; a telework program business case and plan; a detailed accounting
2.24of the purpose, goals, and operating procedures of the telework program; methodologies
2.25for measuring telework program activities and success; and a deployment schedule for
2.26increasing telework activity.
2.27 Subd. 2. Credit allowed. An employer is allowed a tax credit against the tax
2.28imposed by this chapter for a percentage of eligible telework expenses incurred. The
2.29amount of the credit is calculated as follows:
2.30(1) 100 percent of the eligible telework expenses incurred under a telework
2.31agreement requiring the participating employee to telework at least 15 days per month;
2.32(2) 75 percent of the eligible telework expenses incurred under a telework agreement
2.33requiring the participating employee to telework at least ten days per month; or
2.34(3) 25 percent of the eligible telework expenses incurred under a telework agreement
2.35requiring the participating employee to telework at least five days per month.
3.1 Subd. 3. Telework assessment credit. (a) In addition to the credit provided by
3.2subdivision 2, an employer conducting a telework assessment on or after July 1, 2011, is
3.3allowed a credit in the calendar year of implementation of the employer's formal telework
3.4program against the tax imposed by this chapter for 100 percent of the cost of preparing
3.5the assessment, up to a maximum credit of $20,000 per employer. The credit provided
3.6by this subdivision is intended to include program planning expenses, including direct
3.7program development and training costs, raw labor costs, and professional consulting fees.
3.8The credit does not include expenses for which a credit or subtraction is claimed under
3.9any other provision of this chapter. The credit is allowed only once per employer.
3.10(b) All telework assessments eligible for a tax credit under this subdivision shall
3.11meet standards for eligibility adopted by the commissioner.
3.12 Subd. 4. Limitations. The credit for any taxable year must not exceed the
3.13employer's liability for tax. Any unused tax credit may not be carried forward to apply to
3.14the employer's succeeding years' tax liability. The tax credit may not be used against the
3.15employer's prior years' tax liability.
3.16 Subd. 5. Application. (a) An employer seeking to claim a credit provided for
3.17under subdivisions 2 and 3 must submit an application to the commissioner for tentative
3.18approval of the credit between September 1 and October 31 of the year preceding the
3.19calendar year for which the credit is to be earned. The commissioner shall adopt the
3.20rules and forms on which the application is to be submitted. Amounts specified on the
3.21application must not be changed by the employer after the application is approved by the
3.22commissioner. Applications must certify that the employer would not have incurred the
3.23eligible telework expenses but for the availability of the credit. The commissioner shall
3.24review the application and tentatively approve the application upon determining that
3.25it meets the requirements of this section.
3.26(b) The total amount of both credits approved by the commissioner under this section
3.27must not exceed $....... in any calendar year.
3.28(c) The commissioner shall notify each employer of the credits tentatively approved
3.29and allocated to the employer by December 31 of the year in which the application
3.30was submitted. Once the credit application is approved and the amount approved is
3.31communicated to the applicant, the employer may make purchases approved for the credit
3.32at any time during the calendar year following the approval of the application. The
3.33employer may then apply the amount of the approved credit to its liability for the tax
3.34year or years for which the approved application applies. If the employer has a tax year
3.35other than a calendar year and the calendar year expenses are incurred in more than one
4.1taxable year, the credit shall be applied to each taxable year based on when the expenses
4.2were incurred.
4.3 Subd. 6. Public report. The commissioner shall make available a public report
4.4disclosing the employer names claiming the credit under this section and the amounts
4.5of the credits.
4.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
4.7December 31, 2011.
4.8 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297A.67, is amended by adding a subdivision
4.9to read:
4.10 Subd. 33. Telework expenses. Telework expenses, as defined in section 290.0693,
4.11subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (1), are exempt.
4.12EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
4.13June 30, 2011.
1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to taxation; creating a teleworking credit; providing a sales tax
1.3exemption for telework expenses;amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section
1.4297A.67, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
1.5Statutes, chapter 290.
1.6BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
1.7 Section 1. [290.0693] TELEWORKING CREDIT.
1.8 Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) The terms in this section have the meanings given
1.9them.
1.10(b) "Eligible telework expenses" means expenses incurred during the calendar year
1.11pursuant to a telework agreement, up to a limit of $1,200 for each participating employee,
1.12to enable a participating employee to begin to telework. Eligible expenses:
1.13(1) include, but are not limited to, expenses paid or incurred to purchase computers;
1.14computer-related hardware and software; modems; data processing equipment;
1.15telecommunications equipment; high-speed Internet connectivity equipment; computer
1.16security software and devices; and all related delivery, installation, and maintenance fees;
1.17(2) do not include:
1.18(i) replacement costs for computers, computer-related hardware and software,
1.19modems, data processing equipment, telecommunications equipment, or computer
1.20security software and devices at the principal place of business when that equipment is
1.21relocated to the telework site; and
1.22(ii) expenses for which a credit or subtraction is claimed under any other provision
1.23of this chapter;
1.24(3) may be incurred only once per employee; and
2.1(4) may be incurred directly by the employer on behalf of the participating employee
2.2or directly by the participating employee and subsequently reimbursed by the employer.
2.3(c) "Employer" means any employer subject to tax under this chapter.
2.4(d) "Participating employee" means an employee who has entered into a telework
2.5agreement with the employee's employer on or after July 1, 2011. Participating employee
2.6does not include an individual who is self-employed or an individual who ordinarily
2.7spends a majority of the workday at a location other than the employer's principal place of
2.8business.
2.9(e) "Telework" means to perform normal and regular work functions on a workday
2.10that ordinarily would be performed at the employer's principal place of business at a
2.11different location, thereby eliminating or substantially reducing the physical commute
2.12to and from that employer's principal place of business. Telework shall not include
2.13home-based businesses, extensions of the workday, or work performed on a weekend
2.14or holiday.
2.15(f) "Telework agreement" means an agreement signed by the employer and the
2.16participating employee, on or after July 1, 2011, that defines the terms of a telework
2.17arrangement, including the number of days per year the participating employee will
2.18telework in order to qualify for the credit as provided in subdivision 2, and any restrictions
2.19on the place from which the participating employee will telework.
2.20(g) "Telework assessment" means an optional assessment leading to the development
2.21of policies and procedures necessary to implement a formal telework program that would
2.22qualify the employer for the credit provided in subdivision 2, including but not limited
2.23to a workforce profile; a telework program business case and plan; a detailed accounting
2.24of the purpose, goals, and operating procedures of the telework program; methodologies
2.25for measuring telework program activities and success; and a deployment schedule for
2.26increasing telework activity.
2.27 Subd. 2. Credit allowed. An employer is allowed a tax credit against the tax
2.28imposed by this chapter for a percentage of eligible telework expenses incurred. The
2.29amount of the credit is calculated as follows:
2.30(1) 100 percent of the eligible telework expenses incurred under a telework
2.31agreement requiring the participating employee to telework at least 15 days per month;
2.32(2) 75 percent of the eligible telework expenses incurred under a telework agreement
2.33requiring the participating employee to telework at least ten days per month; or
2.34(3) 25 percent of the eligible telework expenses incurred under a telework agreement
2.35requiring the participating employee to telework at least five days per month.
3.1 Subd. 3. Telework assessment credit. (a) In addition to the credit provided by
3.2subdivision 2, an employer conducting a telework assessment on or after July 1, 2011, is
3.3allowed a credit in the calendar year of implementation of the employer's formal telework
3.4program against the tax imposed by this chapter for 100 percent of the cost of preparing
3.5the assessment, up to a maximum credit of $20,000 per employer. The credit provided
3.6by this subdivision is intended to include program planning expenses, including direct
3.7program development and training costs, raw labor costs, and professional consulting fees.
3.8The credit does not include expenses for which a credit or subtraction is claimed under
3.9any other provision of this chapter. The credit is allowed only once per employer.
3.10(b) All telework assessments eligible for a tax credit under this subdivision shall
3.11meet standards for eligibility adopted by the commissioner.
3.12 Subd. 4. Limitations. The credit for any taxable year must not exceed the
3.13employer's liability for tax. Any unused tax credit may not be carried forward to apply to
3.14the employer's succeeding years' tax liability. The tax credit may not be used against the
3.15employer's prior years' tax liability.
3.16 Subd. 5. Application. (a) An employer seeking to claim a credit provided for
3.17under subdivisions 2 and 3 must submit an application to the commissioner for tentative
3.18approval of the credit between September 1 and October 31 of the year preceding the
3.19calendar year for which the credit is to be earned. The commissioner shall adopt the
3.20rules and forms on which the application is to be submitted. Amounts specified on the
3.21application must not be changed by the employer after the application is approved by the
3.22commissioner. Applications must certify that the employer would not have incurred the
3.23eligible telework expenses but for the availability of the credit. The commissioner shall
3.24review the application and tentatively approve the application upon determining that
3.25it meets the requirements of this section.
3.26(b) The total amount of both credits approved by the commissioner under this section
3.27must not exceed $....... in any calendar year.
3.28(c) The commissioner shall notify each employer of the credits tentatively approved
3.29and allocated to the employer by December 31 of the year in which the application
3.30was submitted. Once the credit application is approved and the amount approved is
3.31communicated to the applicant, the employer may make purchases approved for the credit
3.32at any time during the calendar year following the approval of the application. The
3.33employer may then apply the amount of the approved credit to its liability for the tax
3.34year or years for which the approved application applies. If the employer has a tax year
3.35other than a calendar year and the calendar year expenses are incurred in more than one
4.1taxable year, the credit shall be applied to each taxable year based on when the expenses
4.2were incurred.
4.3 Subd. 6. Public report. The commissioner shall make available a public report
4.4disclosing the employer names claiming the credit under this section and the amounts
4.5of the credits.
4.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
4.7December 31, 2011.
4.8 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297A.67, is amended by adding a subdivision
4.9to read:
4.10 Subd. 33. Telework expenses. Telework expenses, as defined in section 290.0693,
4.11subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (1), are exempt.
4.12EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
4.13June 30, 2011.
Monday, March 7, 2011
The Slow, But Promising, Rise of Telecommuting
Don Kirkpatrick’s Contribution to Learning & Development ..The Slow, But Promising, Rise of Telecommuting
by Marci Paino on March 4, 2011 •
The Telework Research Center reports that only 2 percent of the U.S. workforce — 2.8 million people — identifies home as their primary location of work. Meanwhile, a much greater number — 17.2 billion people — work from home at least one day a week. Moreover, 40 percent of U.S. workers indicate that they can do their job from home, which is a trend supported by the growth of informational jobs over industrial jobs.
There have been many articles written about telecommuting benefits, challenges and strategies for the employer and employee. Some of these articles contain misperceptions about telecommuting, including one by the Vancouver Sun that reports Working from home raises productivity, once crumbs are cleared from keyboards: Lack of chit-chat from adjoining cubicles reduces the chances of distraction.
First, the article explores employers’ fears of telecommuting, including:
•Lost control (more difficult to supervise).
•Lack of communication.
•Breech in security and confidentiality.
•Decrease in team morale and loyalty to the company.
None of these fears can be questioned. But then, the article discusses ways to convince your boss to allow telecommuting in spite of these fears. In summary, the benefits discussed include:
•Increased flexibility in work hours to accommodate personal needs.
•Increased productivity.
At initial glance, these benefits seem plausible. However, a couple of the supporting points made are not entirely accurate.
Not only do you seem healthier working from home, taking fewer sick days, but, inexplicably, there are fewer problems with that other office malaise: technology.
In fact, your office-issued equipment seems to work better when it’s plugged into your personal grid, maybe because you are finally forced to troubleshoot or maybe because fewer wires are crossed on a network of one.
Some companies may have minor bandwidth issues with all their employees in office accessing the Internet at one time. However, the speed offered in many residential areas does not compare to those offered by a large business network. Technology, specifically the Internet, could actually become a challenge for a telecommuter.
Another inaccurate point made:
There are no distractions when you work from home. Except maybe the letter carrier and the kid collecting for soccer camp. No chit-chat with cubicle neighbours, and no dedicated coffee breaks or lunch hours, either, certainly not those dictated by union contract or years of routine.
There are different types of distractions that occur when you work from home. It might not be the gossiping neighbor, but could be household chores, a child, a sick spouse, roommates, the television or many other similar personal distractions. These distractions and the need to learn how to be self-motivated can also become a challenge to a telecommuter.
Although this spotlights some potential challenges for the telecommuter, there are benefits to the employer and organization that are not completely covered in the article, including:
•Decreased expenses associated with real estate costs and other overhead.
•Increased incentive used to recruit top talent.
Telecommuting is without a doubt on the rise and continuing to gain in popularity. Company leaders will need to continue to consider this as an option as the cost of living and travel increases. Telecommuting can work if the company goes in prepared. When the time comes to implement telecommuting options, companies should consider how to train managers on how to lead virtual teams and employees on how to work to create structure that promotes maximum productivity and work-life balance.
by Marci Paino on March 4, 2011 •
The Telework Research Center reports that only 2 percent of the U.S. workforce — 2.8 million people — identifies home as their primary location of work. Meanwhile, a much greater number — 17.2 billion people — work from home at least one day a week. Moreover, 40 percent of U.S. workers indicate that they can do their job from home, which is a trend supported by the growth of informational jobs over industrial jobs.
There have been many articles written about telecommuting benefits, challenges and strategies for the employer and employee. Some of these articles contain misperceptions about telecommuting, including one by the Vancouver Sun that reports Working from home raises productivity, once crumbs are cleared from keyboards: Lack of chit-chat from adjoining cubicles reduces the chances of distraction.
First, the article explores employers’ fears of telecommuting, including:
•Lost control (more difficult to supervise).
•Lack of communication.
•Breech in security and confidentiality.
•Decrease in team morale and loyalty to the company.
None of these fears can be questioned. But then, the article discusses ways to convince your boss to allow telecommuting in spite of these fears. In summary, the benefits discussed include:
•Increased flexibility in work hours to accommodate personal needs.
•Increased productivity.
At initial glance, these benefits seem plausible. However, a couple of the supporting points made are not entirely accurate.
Not only do you seem healthier working from home, taking fewer sick days, but, inexplicably, there are fewer problems with that other office malaise: technology.
In fact, your office-issued equipment seems to work better when it’s plugged into your personal grid, maybe because you are finally forced to troubleshoot or maybe because fewer wires are crossed on a network of one.
Some companies may have minor bandwidth issues with all their employees in office accessing the Internet at one time. However, the speed offered in many residential areas does not compare to those offered by a large business network. Technology, specifically the Internet, could actually become a challenge for a telecommuter.
Another inaccurate point made:
There are no distractions when you work from home. Except maybe the letter carrier and the kid collecting for soccer camp. No chit-chat with cubicle neighbours, and no dedicated coffee breaks or lunch hours, either, certainly not those dictated by union contract or years of routine.
There are different types of distractions that occur when you work from home. It might not be the gossiping neighbor, but could be household chores, a child, a sick spouse, roommates, the television or many other similar personal distractions. These distractions and the need to learn how to be self-motivated can also become a challenge to a telecommuter.
Although this spotlights some potential challenges for the telecommuter, there are benefits to the employer and organization that are not completely covered in the article, including:
•Decreased expenses associated with real estate costs and other overhead.
•Increased incentive used to recruit top talent.
Telecommuting is without a doubt on the rise and continuing to gain in popularity. Company leaders will need to continue to consider this as an option as the cost of living and travel increases. Telecommuting can work if the company goes in prepared. When the time comes to implement telecommuting options, companies should consider how to train managers on how to lead virtual teams and employees on how to work to create structure that promotes maximum productivity and work-life balance.
Telework-Emerging Opportunities for Employers and Employees in the Marketplace
SAVE THE DATE: March 16
Telework-Emerging Opportunities for Employers and Employees in the Marketplace
Date: March 16, 2011
Time: 9 am – 4 pm
Location: Bigwood Event Center Fergus Falls, Minnesota
The Telework Summit will call attention to the opportunities and benefits in teleworking for employers and employees. The summit will feature speakers from well know regional firms who are using telework within their companies to lower costs and increase productivity. The summit will highlight the Fergus Falls Teleworking infrastructure within our city and the region as well as share experiences from employees who have successfully teleworked for many years. The Summit will also include presentations from leading virtual personnel companies.
To register, email Mary Robertson at the FFEIC at: mary.robertson@ci.fergus-falls.mn.us
Cost for the program including lunch is $15.00. ATTENDANCE IS LIMITED!
To register and pay online, go to Telework Summit. Or http://www.ffeic.org/ and follow the link on the homepage.
Who Should Attend?
- Human Relations Managers
- Company CEO and CFO's
- Educational and Government
- City and County Officials
- Employment Agencies
- Interested Businesses
- Planners
- IT Staff
- Employee Program Managers
Please share the attachment with others who may be interested.
Questions? Contact Ann Higgins at 651-281-1257 or at ahiggins@lmc.org
Heather Cederholm
Member Outreach Coordinator
Intergovernmental Relations Department
Tel: (651) 281-1256
Fax: (651) 215-4113
hcederholm@lmc.org
www.lmc.org
League of Minnesota Cities
145 University Ave. West
St. Paul, MN 55103
Connecting & Innovating since 1913
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Telework-Emerging Opportunities for Employers and Employees in the Marketplace
Date: March 16, 2011
Time: 9 am – 4 pm
Location: Bigwood Event Center Fergus Falls, Minnesota
The Telework Summit will call attention to the opportunities and benefits in teleworking for employers and employees. The summit will feature speakers from well know regional firms who are using telework within their companies to lower costs and increase productivity. The summit will highlight the Fergus Falls Teleworking infrastructure within our city and the region as well as share experiences from employees who have successfully teleworked for many years. The Summit will also include presentations from leading virtual personnel companies.
To register, email Mary Robertson at the FFEIC at: mary.robertson@ci.fergus-falls.mn.us
Cost for the program including lunch is $15.00. ATTENDANCE IS LIMITED!
To register and pay online, go to Telework Summit. Or http://www.ffeic.org/ and follow the link on the homepage.
Who Should Attend?
- Human Relations Managers
- Company CEO and CFO's
- Educational and Government
- City and County Officials
- Employment Agencies
- Interested Businesses
- Planners
- IT Staff
- Employee Program Managers
Please share the attachment with others who may be interested.
Questions? Contact Ann Higgins at 651-281-1257 or at ahiggins@lmc.org
Heather Cederholm
Member Outreach Coordinator
Intergovernmental Relations Department
Tel: (651) 281-1256
Fax: (651) 215-4113
hcederholm@lmc.org
www.lmc.org
League of Minnesota Cities
145 University Ave. West
St. Paul, MN 55103
Connecting & Innovating since 1913
Web Facebook Twitter Blog
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Tuesday, March 1, 2011
"Work from home" fantasy: the reality that works
If you have the drive and discipline to work successfully from home, you have more opportunities to do so than ever before, even in today's employment climate. More and more employers are providing telework opportunities as a matter of enlightened self-interest. Telework jobs expand organizations' talent pools while maximizing limited overhead resources and improving employee satisfaction, as well as reducing traffic congestion and carbon emissions.
According to Commuter Connections' 2010 State of the Commute Survey, a quarter of regional commuters now telework at least occasionally. This is more than twice the percentage who worked from home in 2001. More than half of area workers now say their employer has either a formal or informal telework option.
So how do you find these coveted telework jobs? The federal government is a good place to start. "All federal agencies have telework programs," Cindy Auten, general manager of Telework Exchange, a non-profit that promotes successful telework practices, explained. "For recruitment purposes, most agencies will tag their telework-friendly jobs, so just go to usajobs.gov and type in 'telework' or 'telecommute,'" she recommended.
Auten named the Patent and Trademark Office, the Defense Information Agency and the General Services Administration as the agencies with the most robust telework programs. She reported that Discovery Communications, Booz Allen Hamilton and Marriott International have some of the area's top private sector telecommuting programs. Be aware that employers will often require on-site work before transitioning employees to work-from-home situations.
Ellen Duncan, vice president of human resources for a Gaithersburg biotech firm, spent many years recruiting employees for federal jobs, government contractors and other private sector firms, including many teleworkers. "Look at any entity that needs to hire a lot of people quickly. They often don't have the office space and infrastructure to accommodate on-site staff," she suggested. To do this, try following the federal money trail. You can visit the Federal Procurement Data System--Next Generation at fpds.gov to research recently awarded contracts.
But it is not only the large employers for whom teleworkers make sense. Duncan noted that entrepreneurs and home-based businesses often prefer home-based workers as well. "The owner's office is often wherever their phone and laptop is, so they just need you to be available by phone and internet," she observed. Thus, a growing field these days is that of "virtual assistant," a job Duncan recommended "if you're particularly organized and tolerant."
Companies in which the workload increases significantly on a cyclical basis often use teleworkers because the employers do not want to invest in office space they only need some of the time, Duncan added. Examples include companies with end-of-pay-period processing deadlines and monthly inventory checks.
Duncan offered these tips on proposing telework in your current job or a prospective job: "The successful plan starts with an idea that is well thought out and with a variety of contingencies addressed. Suggest a test period in which the employer and employee both have the right to say 'no' if it's not working out." Be sure to present your plan as one that benefits the company rather than one based on personal considerations.
Auten and Duncan both cautioned job seekers to beware of job scams that target people who want to work from home. Legitimate employers never charge money to hire you or get you started.
This special advertising section was written by Laura K. Nickle and Suzanne Gunther of Communi-k, Inc., in conjunction with The Washington Post Custom Content Department. The production of this supplement did not involve The Washington Post news or editorial staff.
According to Commuter Connections' 2010 State of the Commute Survey, a quarter of regional commuters now telework at least occasionally. This is more than twice the percentage who worked from home in 2001. More than half of area workers now say their employer has either a formal or informal telework option.
So how do you find these coveted telework jobs? The federal government is a good place to start. "All federal agencies have telework programs," Cindy Auten, general manager of Telework Exchange, a non-profit that promotes successful telework practices, explained. "For recruitment purposes, most agencies will tag their telework-friendly jobs, so just go to usajobs.gov and type in 'telework' or 'telecommute,'" she recommended.
Auten named the Patent and Trademark Office, the Defense Information Agency and the General Services Administration as the agencies with the most robust telework programs. She reported that Discovery Communications, Booz Allen Hamilton and Marriott International have some of the area's top private sector telecommuting programs. Be aware that employers will often require on-site work before transitioning employees to work-from-home situations.
Ellen Duncan, vice president of human resources for a Gaithersburg biotech firm, spent many years recruiting employees for federal jobs, government contractors and other private sector firms, including many teleworkers. "Look at any entity that needs to hire a lot of people quickly. They often don't have the office space and infrastructure to accommodate on-site staff," she suggested. To do this, try following the federal money trail. You can visit the Federal Procurement Data System--Next Generation at fpds.gov to research recently awarded contracts.
But it is not only the large employers for whom teleworkers make sense. Duncan noted that entrepreneurs and home-based businesses often prefer home-based workers as well. "The owner's office is often wherever their phone and laptop is, so they just need you to be available by phone and internet," she observed. Thus, a growing field these days is that of "virtual assistant," a job Duncan recommended "if you're particularly organized and tolerant."
Companies in which the workload increases significantly on a cyclical basis often use teleworkers because the employers do not want to invest in office space they only need some of the time, Duncan added. Examples include companies with end-of-pay-period processing deadlines and monthly inventory checks.
Duncan offered these tips on proposing telework in your current job or a prospective job: "The successful plan starts with an idea that is well thought out and with a variety of contingencies addressed. Suggest a test period in which the employer and employee both have the right to say 'no' if it's not working out." Be sure to present your plan as one that benefits the company rather than one based on personal considerations.
Auten and Duncan both cautioned job seekers to beware of job scams that target people who want to work from home. Legitimate employers never charge money to hire you or get you started.
This special advertising section was written by Laura K. Nickle and Suzanne Gunther of Communi-k, Inc., in conjunction with The Washington Post Custom Content Department. The production of this supplement did not involve The Washington Post news or editorial staff.
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