The report, titled Lessons Learned: 1,000 Days of Distributed at Atlassian claims that options to work from home (WFH) are essential for staff to work longer and more productively.
Scott Farquhar, billionaire and co-founder of Atlassian, argued that businesses that try to return fully to pre-pandemic working conditions will hurt their productivity—and fail to reach their full potential. Embracing flexible working arrangements is the way to go, and the idea of office spontaneity is outdated “corporate folklore” and no longer relevant.
“The conversation on remote work is too caught up in where work happens and not enough in how it happens,” said Farquhar. “The reality is, most businesses already work in some form of a distributed way—whether that’s customers and clients in different offices, or colleagues across time zones.”
See also: Remote-first: How 3 major firms are making it work
92 percent: Remote work allows them to do their best work
The report, interviewing employees working in Atlassian, revealed that 92% of respondents agreed that the distributed work policy set by the organization allows them to do their best work and be productive, while 91% agreed that it was an important reason why they stayed with Atlassian.
Atlassian’s survey of leaders from 200 other large organizations worldwide found that the biggest blockers to productivity were back-to-back meetings, vague priorities, confusing emails and endless distracting notifications—not location. 99% of executives surveyed agreed work will become more distributed in the future.
“Distributed work isn’t a sacrifice—it’s a huge opportunity for businesses and for people—especially underrepresented groups,” said Atlassian’s Annie Dean, Global Head of Team Anywhere.
Champa Ha wrote this story for HRM Asia, and you can find more from this author at HRMAsia.com.
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