After having had
a taste of remote working through the pandemic, employees are now yearning for
even greater flexibility when it comes to their working hours. According to a
report by Adobe, 51 percent of enterprise employees would like to have complete
flexibility when it comes to their schedule, in contrast to only 16 percent of
respondents who said their ideal work week would have no flexibility at all,
but rather “start and end work according to a set work schedule.”
Younger
generations in particular appear to care about levels of self-autonomy over
their work schedule, with 73 percent of Millennials saying that they would
switch jobs to another with greater flexibility if their salary and job
description stayed the same, according to the report. At the same time, as
Wrike writes, an increase in flexible work schedules may also help gender
equality, as parents can share the burden of child care. This trend appears to
be gaining steam, as we’ve seen more companies taking up the idea, and even governments,
as Ireland now gets set to implement the right to request flexible work
arrangements, according to RTÉ.
Times have
changed since Henry Ford introduced 8 hour shifts for factory workers, back in
the early 1900s. As Forbes writes, living in a service economy is not the same
as a manufacturing economy; we now have the technology to connect us with
colleagues in different time zones instantaneously, and for many people, at
least in the global north, social patterns have completely changed. As Adobe writes,
“Employers need to address these challenges, or risk losing top talent.”
By Anna Fleck,
Statista

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