A survey at the end of March 2020 by Gartner Inc. revealed 74% of CEOs were intending to shift some of their workers to work remotely permanently.
The reality of post-COVID financial pressures will mean businesses will need to embrace remote working in some capacity as a cost-cutting measure. Recent recruitment trends have also shown that having the option to work from home is seen as a desirable trait in a company by virtually 100% of candidates.
A company embracing a virtual workspace and remote working also massively opens the talent pool of available staff, allowing them to target the best at the required skill or discipline from all across the globe, not constrained by borders or locations.
As we see a return to the new normal for the workforce, a centralized physical office may not be as necessary as previously thought. As restrictions around movement in the wake of the virus ease, the technology is in place to make anywhere a virtual workplace. Cafes, libraries, or the new breed of hot desk coworking spaces, all cater to workers who wish to break the office or home dynamic.
Innovation with cloud-based storage systems and contemporary Electronic Document and Record Management Systems (EDRMS) allow for information to be labelled with specific access requirements to an individual or specific clearance level ensuring a balance between access and security, for staff and company data. Workplace systems can be set up on virtual remote servers for access by VPN or custom logins which allow for people to access via their own laptop, which saves further equipment and hardware costs and multiple team members able to collaborate on files and projects.
The future of work will no longer rely on people having to attend a single central location for the 9 to 5 workday to perform their specified tasks. The new working world will tap into a huge pool of freelance talent, with the flexibility of remote working enabling an engaged and productive workforce, less constrained by time and geography.