UK businesses failing on flexible working

UK businesses failing on flexible working

Europe’s largest Unified Communications and Collaboration event, today reveals the results of its ‘State of the Unified Communications and Collaboration Nation’ survey. 

The survey of 1,000 British workers reveals that while 80 percent believe flexible working should be an option for all, two thirds of businesses are failing to provide the right tools and technologies to make this a reality. While industry commentators see UC&C as a high growth market that’s expected to be worth $17.38 billion by 2019 – up from $5.15 billion last year, the survey indicates UK businesses are yet to fully invest. This is despite clear acceptance of the demand for flexible working and the business benefits the deployment of UC&C can offer, for both employees and the C-Suite alike:

– 80 percent believe flexible working should be an option for all

– 48 percent of employees claim that this would result in increased productivity

– Just under 50 percent of workers argue they would be happier at work if they were able to work remotely

– 64 percent of C-level executives believe productivity would increase through employees working more flexibly

– 80 percent of C-Level executives argue that the offer of flexible working attracts a better quality of candidate. The survey goes on to identify a clear disconnect between the apparent benefits of the deployment of UC&C and the reality of implementation for many organisations

Roadblock obstacles include:

Increased security risks:

– 72 percent of those surveyed cited security as the biggest issue if employees used their own devices for work

– This is despite the fact that 57 percent of workers surveyed already claim to use personal accounts such as file sharing, social media, voice, or instant messaging to do their jobs better

– 45 percent were concerned about the cost and complexity of implementing the necessary technology

– 45 percent were worried about the employee ‘skiving’ despite the fact that fewer than 30 percent of employers monitor work output and activity, even though the technology to do so exists

Bradley Maule-ffinch, Director UC Group, Imago Techmedia, comments; “The workplace is changing dramatically and enterprise mobility is becoming a more pervasive reality. The survey shows clear trends that employees are ready for flexible working and that businesses at the very least at C-level realise the need to be more flexible in their offerings to attract the best and brightest digital natives. It is vital businesses stop accepting the status quo, and implement the appropriate technology, to not only solve the immediate business concerns of today but the demands of a new generation of workers and business issues of tomorrow.”

Read more

Latest News

Read More

Process over top-down enforcement: How to empower employees to prevent data leaks

29 November 2024

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

University of Leeds – Professional Services – Human ResourcesSalary: £39,105 to £46,485 per annum (depending on experience) Grade 7

HR M&A Expertise: Extensive experience having led 10+ mergers and acquisitions within or for a global organization, focusing on HR due diligence and integration planning.

Lead and manage the HR team of 4, comprising a Recruitment Advisor, HR Advisor, Senior HR Advisor, and Senior Payroll Advisor. The Executive Director –

The role of the Human Resources Director is to ensure the HR effectiveness of Connected Places Catapult by developing and implementing the people plan in

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE