by: Sean Hawkins
Pamela La
Gioia is CEO and Founder of Telework Recruiting, a premier website helping
professionals find telecommuting employment. She has been researching remote
work since the early 1990s, so we decided to send a few questions her way for an Insider Interview.
1. What is your prior experience in the
call center?
If you mean me personally, have no experience working in a call center,
either onsite or virtual. Unless you include cold calling as a sales rep. But
that was from my desk in my own office, not in an actual center. However, I
have helped virtual call centers find call agents or telemarketers, either by
posting job ads on my website, or by sourcing people for them.
2. Where did your interest in telecommuting
come from?
After working for a few years as
a counselor at an inpatient psychiatric hospital, I started wishing there was
some type of work I could do from home. The internet was just taking off, and
so I did a search on AltaVista (showing my age!) for working from home. I never
even heard of the term “telecommute” at that time. I came across a website that
promised me a list of 100 companies that hired home workers, at the cost of
$36.00. I paid the fee, received the list, and began contacting every company
on it. I was quickly disappointed when over and over either the company said
they didn’t hire home workers, or all home workers they did hire worked onsite
for at least two years first.
I wrote the company I purchased
the list from and demanded a refund. I never got one. Angry, I decided I could
do a better job finding flexible companies on my own. Unfortunately, it wasn’t
easy. Back in the early 1990s telecommuting (as I learned home working was
called), was not popular. And it was a perk given to only very experienced,
very trusted employees. And even those employees needed to be within commutable
distances to their companies since things like wifi and Skyping didn’t even
exist yet.
Nonetheless, while working a
regular job, I managed to find around 700 companies that did hire home workers
throughout the US, and some in Canada. I also began learning everything I could
about telecommuting, reading information from people like Gil Gordon, Priscilla
Huff, and Jack Niles.
3. What was the catalyst for Telework
Recruiting?
In 1993 I started
Mommysplace.net, a website to help stay at home moms find work from home. Two
things happened. 1. Men would write and ask if my information would help them.
2. Companies began wanting to use my site to recruit home workers, but didn’t
like the “mommy” part of my site name. They felt it was unprofessional and
excluded men. So, in 1999, Telework Recruiting.com was born. Since then,
Telework Recruiting has amassed around 2,500 companies that hire telecommuters.
4. Do you see telecommuting as a viable
option for companies?
I can’t see why most companies
don’t have telecommuting as an option for their employees. With the
technological capabilities we now have, there are very few companies that can’t
take advantage of this flexible work option. Obviously, assembly workers in an
auto plant can’t work at home. However, that same company could easily allow
most of their desk workers to telecommute, saving them a lot of money on
overhead.
5. What are some of the challenges faced
when managing employees who work from home?
There are five big concerns I
think companies have when it comes to managing remote employees:
1. Security. Keeping
proprietary information safe. This also involves data safety. This can be
addressed with antivirus, firewalls, or other data protection programs. If an
employee is in a medical field, then HIPAA is a concern. If s/he is in a legal
profession, than the Attorney Client Privilege is a concern.
2. Co-worker issues:
Adult or not, jealously can rear its ugly head if not everyone is allowed to
work from home. After all, no one likes to pay high gas prices, wrestle with
traffic, or leave their home early in the morning. Even when someone thrives in
an office environment they would probably at least like to have the option to stay
at home.
Also, making a transition from
working onsite to working at home affects everyone. Jealousy aside, co-workers
will have to adjust to not having remote staff around if they need them.
Inevitably, there will be times when they'll end up filling in for them, even
though technically they’re doing their same jobs from home.
3. Communication issues:
The usage of e-mail, Google Hangouts, Skype (especially video), and social
media are all great ways for co-workers to communicate and interact. However,
video calling is still pretty new, and it can actually be uncomfortable for
some people, especially “older” workers. It also requires a little bit of
training for everyone.
4. Job function issues:
Do your staff have all the necessary resources to do their work from home? In
other words, will they be able to work just as resourcefully as they did
onsite? There should be little difference between their home and work offices.
Make sure homeworkers have
well-equipped offices (computer, video chat, fax, landline, printer, scanner,
software, and so on), as well as back up plans. Hardware breaks. Computers
crash. Then what? How will staff prevent vital information from getting lost?
Depending on their profession and the sensitivity of the information, developing
a Plan B could be vital.
5. Trust: Employers are
human; and, like anyone else, they have fears and control issues. Some
employers need to feel in control. They think they need to micro-manage their
staff to make sure they are actually doing their jobs and that they’re being
done to their liking. What's more, there are supervisors who cannot fathom work
being done properly unless they have a hand in the process.
6. In your opinion, what is needed to be a
successful work from home candidate?
Not everyone is cut out for the
lifestyle of a teleworker. However, for those who still want to 'give it a go',
they may wish to take a few minutes to make sure they have the following
necessary traits so you will be a successful, productive telecommuter.
●
Planning & Organization Are they organized in general? Do they know
where things are at, and what they will be doing next? Being organized is a top
trait of successful teleworkers. Having activities for the day planned out in
advance is also helpful to keep on track.
●
Self-Disciplined Being self-disciplined means doing what NEEDS
to be done even when you HATE to do it.
●
Professional Professionalism isn't just a behavior; it's a
way of thinking. It means they CARE about what they're doing, and how their
behavior affects the people they’re doing it for.
●
Educated
Do they know what they're doing? Do they have esoteric knowledge and/or
extensive experience to back up their right to teach, preach, write, draw, add,
subtract, or anything else they're doing and demand to get paid for it?
●
Find work intrinsically rewarding If they are unable to stay motivated to give
their absolute best just for the sheer thrill of knowing they're doing a great
job, they might have a hard time maintaining a high level of performance when
it's just them and their computers around to acknowledge it. When someone works
alone at home they have to be able to give themselves all the praise they need.
●
Assertive
Saying "No" is a word teleworkers must feel comfortable using
if they want people to respect their work, their office space, and their time.
No one cares about a project or assignment the way they do; so until someone
does, they need to learn to set limits on the amount of time others take you
away from their work.
●
Prioritized Whether they use lists, pictures, online
planners, or secretaries, they need to prioritize their daily activities, and
then perform them in their right order. Why? Because I can assure you that if
they don't, either they will leave their offices that evening without having
done something that should have been done, OR, they will end up working later
than they wanted to, eating into their personal and family time.
●
Independent How many opinions do your staff need before
they can get moving on something or make decisions? If they aren't confident
enough to think through problems and make decisions about on their own, then
they might be too dependent to work alone from home.
●
Calm
Do they remain calm when nothing seems to be going right? Or, do they
panic when unexpected delays or changes occur? When people react in states of
panic, then decisions are usually made poorly.
Sean is a Customer Experience, Contact
Center and Help desk manager with over 12 years of experience. He has a
terrific pulse on incorporating innovation into the contact center.
He's implemented social, outsourcing partners, new technology, and new
products, while maintaining an award-winning contact center.
In 2011, his team was awarded the ICMI "Global Call Center of the Year" for Small to Medium-Sized Centers. Follow on Twitter- @SeanBHawkins
In 2011, his team was awarded the ICMI "Global Call Center of the Year" for Small to Medium-Sized Centers. Follow on Twitter- @SeanBHawkins
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