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Author Topic:   The future of working
Yin
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posted March 15, 2010 07:03 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Yin     Edit/Delete Message
quote:

More Employers Make Room For Work-Life Balance

by Jennifer Ludden

For years, Katie Sleep's life was dominated by a grueling commute. She remembers never eating dinner before dark, never getting to watch her kids play in the yard. When she lived in San Francisco, she would drop her kids off at day care at 6:00 a.m. in order to get to the office on time. When Sleep launched her own software development company, she felt passionately that her employees should not suffer as she had.

"Work cannot be everything," Sleep says. "People who have their lives are far better workers."

In a large majority of families with children, both parents work, and women now hold half of all jobs. Sleep's company, List Innovative Solutions, is among a growing number of American firms adapting to the needs and wants of a changing workforce.

The company is located amid a tangle of highways in Northern Virginia — a real commuter nightmare. So Sleep lets employees largely set their own hours and telecommute at will. And it's not just mothers but also fathers who take advantage of these flexible work options.

'People End Up Getting Their Job Done'

"They want the ability to go to their children's play, which is usually at 3; it's never at 5 or 6," Sleep says. "And what you find out is, people end up getting their job done."

For those who lament that working 9 to 5, as Dolly Parton once sang, is all takin' and no givin', there are options for a more flexible arrangement. Don't know your flextime from your job share? Here, a quick primer.

Sleep has nearly 100 employees, but on a recent early afternoon visit, many offices are empty. Human Resources Director Kristy Stumpf prepares to head out in time to beat rush hour traffic and to meet her children's school bus.

"When I'm in the office, that's my face time," Stumpf says. "Today were my meetings, filing, that kind of stuff." At home, she works on self-guided projects.

Stumpf's dad was a long-suffering commuter, and she used to think that's just the way life was.

"Now that I've worked here, I realize I would never in a million years be able to be in an office 40, 50 hours a week and commute forever. It just wouldn't work." Stumpf starts to laugh, then seems to catch herself, almost as if she feels guilty about her own good luck.

Work Time Revolution

U.S. labor laws are perfectly suited to 1960, says University of Minnesota sociologist Phyllis Moen. The 40-hour workweek and 9-to-5 workday were all codified in an era when men went off to an assembly line and women stayed home.

"We're really in the middle of something like an industrial revolution," Moen says. "But it's a work time revolution."

Stumpf spends time with her daughters while getting some work done in her home office.

First, more and more employers are discovering that loosening the traditionally rigid work schedule pays off. Sleep says her retention rate over 16 years is an astonishing 95 percent. And study after study shows productivity also shoots up. More than half of companies now say they offer flextime, and one-third allow telecommuting at least part-time.

On the other hand, research also shows that employees don't find their workplaces nearly as flexible as managers report. Work-family experts say arrangements often appear more generous on paper than in practice and can be highly dependent on the generosity of immediate supervisors.

So, what about that revolution? Well, work-life experts say another force is building: working parents are no longer the only ones who want flexible hours.

Millennials Want Balance

"When you talk about Gen-X or Gen-Y or the millennials, they've taught us that we can't necessarily say work-family balance," says Lisa Horn of the Society for Human Resource Management. The preferred term now is work-life, because young workers apparently value their flexibility just as much as a working mom.
Share Your Story

Is your company breaking new ground as a 21st century workplace? Share your story.

You may have heard that millennials in the workplace are lazy and "entitled," but sociologist Moen says that's a bad rap. She says young workers simply don't want to wait decades until retirement for their quality of life — an attitude that has been reinforced by the recession, as they've seen parents and boomer relatives lose their jobs.

"They no longer believe in the myth that working in rigid ways for long hours necessarily pays off," Moen says. "That's a real change."

Another change is the degree of mobile technology young workers have grown up with.

"This generation is completely untethered. They have laptops in grade school," says Jody Thompson, a co-founder of Culture Rx, a consulting firm that promotes a completely flexible work style. Thompson says young people today are used to getting stuff done — on their laptops, cell phones, iPods — wherever they are, whenever they want.

"Then we bring them into the work environment and we say, 'Here's this 6x6 square you're going to work in, with a desktop computer,' which to them, by the way, is a gaming computer," Thompson says. "'And here's your phone with your cord. You come in at 8 and you leave at 5, and between 10 and noon, that's when we're creative.'"

Thompson says young workers simply can't relate to such a system.

Signs Point To Flexibility

If moms and millennials united aren't enough to loosen rigid work rules, experts say yet another push for flexibility will come from an unlikely source: the very baby boomers who defined 9-to-5 culture in their prime. Sociologist Moen says as they grow older, many will want or need to keep working well past traditional retirement age.

In the late '70s and early '80s, Enjoli perfume commercials extolled the era's ideal Superwoman — a perfectly coifed working mom who could "bring home the bacon" and still be sexy for her man. See one of the ads and read how, three decades later, that ideal remains elusive for millions of women — including reporter Jennifer Ludden.

"And older workers who you may want to keep on because of their skills or contacts will want to work differently— more flexibly and less," Moen says.

It's hard to find the case against flexible work these days. Even the staunchly pro-business Chamber of Commerce promotes it, though Marc Freedman, the chamber's director of labor law policy, says it only works for some employees and jobs.

"You can imagine certain jobs where you have to be at the workplace," he says. "And if you're not there, somebody else is going to have to pick up the load, and that won't be fair to them."

In fact, researchers are looking into ways to bring more flexibility to the hardest case low-wage and hourly jobs.

But even at her software development company, Sleep agrees, all flex arrangements are not for everyone. In fact, she says she could never work at home.

"It's not good for me. I like being around the people!" she says.

Sleep has also had to fire employees who took advantage of the flexibility she offers. But she says it's worth finding those who can handle the freedom, even if it makes her job more difficult.

"There's not a day that I don't kind of panic when I know that my workforce is all working from home," she says. "So it's not like you've got it all wrapped up and the answers are simple. It's whether or not you can let loose of that anxiety and really trust in people."


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cpn_edgar_winner
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Posts: 1909
From: Toledo, OH
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 15, 2010 07:29 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for cpn_edgar_winner     Edit/Delete Message
work life balance is very important. when my children were small i had to work a lot of hours. when they were sick i had important stuff i had to do at work, people in town for specific meetings and such, and ultimately your children come first, but at a price in the corporate world. i designed a program in 1996 for the employer to pay for a nanny trained in caring for sick children to care for a sick child in thier home. we won an award for the program and thousands of families utilized the service. with 4 major companies with thousands of employees utilized the service. there are many programs now that make it possible to do both. be a good parent and be a productive employee. many employers offer time off and work from home flexible schedules to help with work life balance. it is possible and some companies care very much that their employees have work life balance. companies that strive to do this deserve kudo's. there is so much more flexability now than in the past.

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Valus
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posted March 15, 2010 08:29 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Valus     Edit/Delete Message

Yin
I was surprised by how
interesting/entertaining
I found the article.

cpn's experience and
comments summed it up.

Thanks guys.

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Valus
Knowflake

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posted March 15, 2010 08:30 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Valus     Edit/Delete Message
"His weariness is that of the gladiator after the combat;
his work was the whitewashing of a corner in a state official's office."

~ franz kafka

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Valus
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posted March 15, 2010 08:35 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Valus     Edit/Delete Message

I was surprised, though,
it didnt really make it clear how much
the standard of living has changed.

A single income on an assembly line job
could support an entire family in the 60's.
(Where was "Welfare" then?)

The article hinted at that,
but I think its worth highlighting.

Imagine if the standard were the same today!

A couple living together, both working,
with no chidren to support...

Wouldn't they be, like, rich?

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Yin
Knowflake

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posted March 15, 2010 08:46 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Yin     Edit/Delete Message
cpn, fascinating! Thank you for sharing that.

Valus, good points.
I was reading the comments on the article. Here there are: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=124611210#commentBlock
Seems like there are a lot of companies that now make allowances for their employees. It'd be great to see my friend who just had a baby be able to take care of her own child when she goes back to work in 11 weeks and not have to rely on some stranger to come in and take care of the newborn. But... she cannot afford NOT to go back to work. In some countries the paid maternity leave lasts 2 years. Not here.

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Valus
Knowflake

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posted March 15, 2010 09:13 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Valus     Edit/Delete Message

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cpn_edgar_winner
Knowflake

Posts: 1909
From: Toledo, OH
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 16, 2010 07:22 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for cpn_edgar_winner     Edit/Delete Message
yes of course valus. two working adults with no children, very often accumulate wealth over the years. most that i know anyway. yin, i know what you mean about the stranger aspect, but once a family has had a caregiver, we would try to match the same caregiver with the same family whenever possible, and have them phone hte night before to confirm and get directions, thereby making a contact with a person and not as frightful as some think. there are many people that would never use a program like that, because they wouldnt want a stranger in thier home. but it is nice having the option. i would recommend a nanny cam, which is now under like 50 bucks.

now sandwich generations which are caring for aling parents also need similar assistance.

a lot of companies have on site day cares also. its just as hard caring for an ailing parent and working.

crap. i am late for work. c-ya.

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cpn_edgar_winner
Knowflake

Posts: 1909
From: Toledo, OH
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 16, 2010 07:30 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for cpn_edgar_winner     Edit/Delete Message
.

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