• Home
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Women on Business

Business Women Expertise, Tips, Advice and More to Build Winning Careers and Brands

You are here: Home / Work at Home/Telecommute / Telecommuting for your Business?

Telecommuting for your Business?

February 16, 2011 By Monica S Flores

More and more women are choosing to telecommute, and more companies are coming up with family-friendly, flexible work-from-home and telecommuting options. Some estimates show that almost 40% of the working population are able to work from home at least part of the time, without a loss in productivity.

If you’re looking into developing a telecommuting plan for yourself or for your office, here are the items to consider:

1) Telecommuters need adequate ways to check in with other office mates, such as through Skype, IRC, or scheduled conference calls.

2) Telecommuters need comfortable and adequate supplies such as office equipment, computer supplies, or manufacturing supplies necessary for accomplishing their work.

3) The company is liable for computers or other hardware: sensitive information should not be stored on computers that are going home with employees.

4) Performance should be a main indicator of success (not time on the job). The number of hours logged does not often correlate with the quality of work: for evaluation purposes, always consider performance to be an indicator of a telecommuter’s success.

5) Adequate supervision: if a telecommuter or work-from-home coworkers needs assistance or guidelines, make a plan for them to get the support they need. A worker will always need a fairly clear list of tasks and an attainable timeline to achieve deliverables, goals, and specific benchmarks.

If you’re considering telecommuting for yourself, or you’re setting up a home office, consider searching for computer desks for home and finding items that are ranked high and rated well for durability, construction, quality of materials, and comfort.

Your work-from-home workforce will be happier, have a reduced carbon footprint, and will be as productive (or even more so) than when they’re in the office.

I encourage you to support the work-from-home and telecommuting movement by educating yourself and doing additional research on what your specific business will need to implement a telecommuting policy.

Monica S Flores

Monica S. Flores leads large-scale web development projects in refactoring, redesign/redevelopment, digital platform buildout, & new product launches. She works with US-based & international associations, non-profits, public agencies, & startups on how to reach their communities online. Her focus is to build community, foster connectedness, & use her technology & management skills to make a better world. She believes each of us has an ability/obligation to use our knowledge, ideas, & talents to advance fairness, justice, safety, health, sustainability, & wellbeing. Find her books at Amazon or connect with her on LinkedIn.

More Posts - Website

Follow Me:
TwitterFacebookLinkedIn

Filed Under: Work at Home/Telecommute

Comments

  1. Sandy Atwood says

    February 19, 2011 at 5:07 pm

    Thanks for the info Monica. I have been telecommuting for 2 years now and I get to spend quality time with my family.

  2. Kate Lister says

    February 20, 2011 at 5:06 pm

    Less than 2% of U.S. employees work from home the majority of the time (not including the self-employed), but 40% hold jobs that are compatible with telework. If those employees who wanted to (about 80%) did so just half of the time (roughly the national average for those who do), the national savings would total almost $650 billion.

    The Nation would:

    – Save 289 million barrels of oil—equivalent to 37% of our Persian Gulf imports
    – Reduce greenhouse gases by 53 million tons/year—27% of the President’s 2020 goal
    – Reduce road travel by 115 billion miles/year saving $2 billion in road maintenance
    – Reduce road congestion thereby increasing productivity for non-telecommuters as well
    – Save 100,000 people from traffic-related injury or death
    – Improve emergency responsiveness

    Businesses would:

    – Increase productivity by over $235 billion
    – Save $124 billion in real estate, electricity, and related costs
    – Save $46 billion in absenteeism
    – Save $31 billion in employee turnover

    Individuals would:

    – Achieve a better work-life balance
    – Recoup 2-3 weeks of free time per year—time they’d have otherwise spent commuting
    – Save $2,000-$7,000/year
    – Save $15 billion at the pumps

    These arent’ just pie-in-the sky numbers. At the TeleworkResearchNetwork we’ve synthesized over 250 studies on telecommuting and related topics. Our research has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, Harvard Business Review, and dozens of other publications.

    Using the latest Census data, and assumptions from dozens of government and private sector sources, we’ve developed a model to quantify the economic, environmental, and societal potential of telecommuting for every, city, county, Congressional District, and state in the U.S. and for the U.K. and Canada. It’s available free on the web at http://teleworkresearchnetwork.com along with a model that allows companies and communities to quantify their own potential telecommuting savings.
    It’s time we made the road less traveled the way to work.™

    Kate Lister, Principal Researcher
    TeleworkResearchNetwork.com

Sponsors

Recommended Reading

ultimate guide to email marketing

Awards & Recognition

Categories

  • Board of Directors
  • Books for Businesswomen
  • Business Development
  • Business Executive Team
  • Business Travel
  • Businesswomen Bloggers
  • Businesswomen Interviews
  • Businesswomen Profiles
  • Career Development
  • Communications
  • Contests
  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
  • Customer Service
  • Decision-making
  • Discounts & Offers
  • Education
  • Equality
  • Ethics
  • Female Entrepreneurs
  • Female Executives
  • Female Executives
  • Finance
  • Franchising
  • Freelancing & the Gig Economy
  • Global Perspectives
  • Health & Wellness
  • Human Resources Issues
  • Infographics
  • International Business
  • Job Satisfaction
  • Job Search
  • Leadership
  • Legal and Compliance Issues
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Networking
  • News and Insights
  • Non-profit
  • Online Business
  • Operations
  • Personal Development
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Productivity
  • Project Management
  • Public Relations
  • Reader Submission
  • Recognition
  • Resources & Publications
  • Retirement and Savings
  • Reviews
  • Sales
  • Slideshow
  • Small Business
  • Social Media
  • Startups
  • Statistics, Facts & Research
  • Strategy
  • Success Stories
  • Team-Building
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Women Business Owners
  • Women On Business
  • Women On Business News
  • Women On Business Offers
  • Women On Business Partners
  • Women On Business Roundtable
  • Women on Business School
  • Work at Home/Telecommute
  • Work-Home Life
  • Workplace Issues

Authors

Quick Links

Home | About | Advertise | Write for Us | Contact

Search This Site

Follow Women on Business

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 Women on Business · Privacy Policy · Comment Policy