The past few weeks have made many organisations much more aware, more rehearsed, more practiced, and more supportive of the possibilities work from home provides.
The last few weeks have been tough on the world. As the novel Covid-19 continues to spread rapidly, killing thousands of people and affecting hundreds of thousands globally, business leaders and human resources teams across the corporate world are partnering very closely to ensure that employees and their families are safe. The virus spreads fast in crowded areas, from touching tainted surfaces and through respiratory droplets released when an infected person coughs or sneezes. This has made working in close proximity in offices a definite health hazard. Social distancing seems to be the only way to keep all employees safe.
'Work from home' is not an alien concept in India, but it is also not widely prevalent. However, over the last few days, it has gained wider acceptability and has also been stress‑tested! For a dynamic company like Paytm, where our offices function round the clock to ensure that we achieve our ultimate goal of financial inclusion of every Indian, making our workforce switch to work from home mode seemed like a challenging task. But once we took the decision, thanks to the efforts by several of our leaders across businesses and functions, we managed to pull it off and are constantly improving at how we learn to collaborate and drive results virtually.
Having an open dialogue
When one of our employees was detected as positive Covid-19, we knew we had to take immediate stringent measures. Our first step was to communicate the decision clearly and directly to the employees. We deliberated on the solution that would minimise the impact on business, but at the same time, ensure the safety and health of the employees. The first communication to shut all offices across the country was to mainly sanitise, sterilise and fumigate the premises and make them safe to work from. The closure was meant only for two days. However, as we monitored the situation across the country, we extended it further. At every stage, we ensured continuous and precise communication through emails, group meetings, and so on. As we were faced with a unique situation, it was important to instil confidence in the employees by providing as much relevant information as possible. To facilitate work from home, we had to take care of several things - whether employees had the resources to be productive from home, regular updates among team members to monitor progress, etc.
So, what does it take to make it work? Employees should not be left to rely on second or third-hand information and take decisions on the basis of rumours. Our organisation was factual, authentic, and transparent in communication. So, when we announced the work from home policy, our teams appreciated the decision, and jumped all in to make it successful. Questions and queries were answered by leaders and teams locally and centrally. The responsible thing for everybody to focus on was to ensure that work did not suffer and everyone stayed safe.
Keep employees in touch with the company
During the time of crisis, it becomes imperative for leaders to ensure that they communicate with employees via virtual tools and mailers as much as possible. These tools also allow designing measurement systems that can collate and track progress. The more they feel they are in touch with the organisation, the less are the chances of their morale weaning off. The more trust one shows towards employees, the more are the chances that they would perform even better than they might usually do.
Ensure they have the right tools
A company needs to ensure that employees have all that is required for them to work from home. Whether it is access to the virtual private network (VPN) or anything else, they should be given access to everything that is needed. It is always better if the tech support team is working in tandem with employees to ensure that work goes on without a hitch.
Is work from home the next big thing?
Companies are already allowing work from home. The scale and magnitude of it would be dependent on the kind of organisation and the role being done by the person. My view is that as companies experience enhanced work from the home situation during this crisis, it will definitely change the way many have been working in the past. It is as much a behavioural mindset change as it is a physical change of how work typically happens. beings are social. Hence there is a lot of value that comes in by meetings in person and working in offices. But collaborating virtually, reducing air travel costs, saving time on the road while continuing to increase productivity is something that the organisation and employees will architect by embracing this concept when needed. The past few weeks have made many organisations much more aware, more rehearsed, more practiced and more supportive of the possibilities work from home provides.
Has COVID-19 forever changed the way we live and work?
Trending
-
SBI General Insurance Launches Digital Health Campaign
-
CredR Rolls Out 'Life Happens' Leave For Its Employees
-
Meesho Announces 30-Week Gender-Neutral Parental Leave Policy
-
Microsoft Unveils Tech Resilience Curriculum To Foster An Inclusive Future
-
60% Indian Professionals Looking For Job Change Due To COVID: Survey
-
SpringPeople And Siemens Collaborate For Digital Transformation Push
-
86% Professionals Believe Hybrid Work Is Essential For Work Life Balance: Report
-
Almost 1 In Every 3 People's Personal Life Affected Due To Work Stress
-
Meesho Rolls Out Reset And Recharge Policy For Employees
-
80% Of Talent Leaders & Academics Say Pandemic Changed Skill Needs For Youth: Report
-
Hero Electric Rolls Out 'Hero Care' Program For Employees
-
Human Capital In Collaboration With ASSOCHAM Hosts Virtual Conference
-
IKEA India, Tata STRIVE Collaborate To Create Employability And Entrepreneurship Opportunities
-
SAP India, Microsoft Launch Tech Skilling Program for Young Women
-
DXC Technology, NASSCOM Collaborate For Employability Skills Program
-
Lenskart To Hire Over 2000 Employees Across India By 2022
-
Mindtree Launches Learn-and-Earn Program
-
Tata AIA Extends 'Raksha Ka Teeka' To Its Employees
-
Swadesh Behera Is The New CPO Of Titan
-
NetConnect Global Plans To Recruit 5000 Tech Professionals In India
-
Hubhopper Plans To Hire 60% Of Indian Podcasters By 2022
-
Corporate India Needs More Women In Leadership Roles: Report
-
Aon to Invest $30 Million and Create 10,000 Apprenticeships by 2030
-
Tech Mahindra Launches ‘Gift a Career’ Initiative for Upskilling of Youth
-
40% Women Prefer Flexible Working Options in Post-COVID World: Survey
-
3 out of 4 companies believe they can effectively hire employees virtually: Report
-
Vodafone , CGI and NASSCOM Foundation launch digital skills platform
-
Odisha: Bank, postal employees to deliver cash for elderly, differently-abled persons
-
Skill India launches AI-based digital platform for "Skilled Workforce"
-
Hiring activity declines 6.73% in first quarter: Survey
-
70% startups impacted by COVID-19 pandemic
-
Bajaj Allianz Life ropes in Santanu Banerjee as CHRO
-
Over 70 Percent MSMEs look at cutting jobs to sustain businesses
-
93 Per Cent employees stressed about returning to office post-lockdown
-
Johnson & Johnson India announces family benefits for same gender partners
-
Indian firms turning friendly towards working mothers
-
Welspun India names Rajendra Mehta as new CHRO
-
Wipro partners with NASSCOM to launch Future Skills platform
Human Capital is niche media organisation for HR and Corporate. Our aim is to create an outstanding user experience for all our clients, readers, employers and employees through inspiring, industry-leading content pieces in the form of case studies, analysis, expert reports, authored articles and blogs. We cover topics such as talent acquisition, learning and development, diversity and inclusion, leadership, compensation, recruitment and many more.
Subscribe Now
Comment