Desire to work from home: results of an Irish study
Desire to work from home: results of an Irish study
Large levels of working from home (WfH) were induced by social distancing and viral control measures undertaken to mitigate the Covid-19 pandemic. Representing an unpredicted change in the way large amounts of people undertake their day to day work, it is expected that the legacy of this event, in terms of significant alterations to work and commuting patterns will have wide-ranging and long-lasting results. However, how persistent the current trends will be, remains an open question. Therefore, there is a need for a well-represented study of employees' preferences for the post-pandemic future and focus on white-collar workers and their well-established attitudes considering their flexibility in terms of workplace arrangements. This paper presents the results of a survey undertaken in Ireland in the summer of 2021 gauging the desire of office workers to WfH, the format that most appeals to them, the consideration of home relocation based on the ability to WfH, and the factors that may explain such preferences. Results indicate high levels of desire to WfH, either full time or partially, with increased desire to WfH positively correlated to pre-pandemic commute length, and to a perceived increase in work productivity and quality of non-work life as a result of time spent WfH. Additionally, a number of workers state that they may consider home relocation based upon the ability to WfH. These results should be interpreted as the desire to WfH or total addressable market that exists, rather than the likely levels of WfH that will be observed post-Covid.
Stefaniec, Agnieszka
66b6b4a6-d73d-43de-a604-40094d303d1b
Brazil, William
8bdb20a1-babe-40cd-8a20-ac1fca7fc10f
Whitney, Warren
3bd525a8-c6ca-4d2c-a14f-55c412b2cda3
Caulfield, Brian
df56ae15-2869-4c05-9617-4ed9feec9f16
16 October 2022
Stefaniec, Agnieszka
66b6b4a6-d73d-43de-a604-40094d303d1b
Brazil, William
8bdb20a1-babe-40cd-8a20-ac1fca7fc10f
Whitney, Warren
3bd525a8-c6ca-4d2c-a14f-55c412b2cda3
Caulfield, Brian
df56ae15-2869-4c05-9617-4ed9feec9f16
Stefaniec, Agnieszka, Brazil, William, Whitney, Warren and Caulfield, Brian
(2022)
Desire to work from home: results of an Irish study.
Journal of Transport Geography, 104, [103416].
(doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2022.103416).
Abstract
Large levels of working from home (WfH) were induced by social distancing and viral control measures undertaken to mitigate the Covid-19 pandemic. Representing an unpredicted change in the way large amounts of people undertake their day to day work, it is expected that the legacy of this event, in terms of significant alterations to work and commuting patterns will have wide-ranging and long-lasting results. However, how persistent the current trends will be, remains an open question. Therefore, there is a need for a well-represented study of employees' preferences for the post-pandemic future and focus on white-collar workers and their well-established attitudes considering their flexibility in terms of workplace arrangements. This paper presents the results of a survey undertaken in Ireland in the summer of 2021 gauging the desire of office workers to WfH, the format that most appeals to them, the consideration of home relocation based on the ability to WfH, and the factors that may explain such preferences. Results indicate high levels of desire to WfH, either full time or partially, with increased desire to WfH positively correlated to pre-pandemic commute length, and to a perceived increase in work productivity and quality of non-work life as a result of time spent WfH. Additionally, a number of workers state that they may consider home relocation based upon the ability to WfH. These results should be interpreted as the desire to WfH or total addressable market that exists, rather than the likely levels of WfH that will be observed post-Covid.
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 August 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 August 2022
Published date: 16 October 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495724
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495724
ISSN: 0966-6923
PURE UUID: f7f49284-3a37-4358-a17e-a7ef8a80c0fd
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Date deposited: 21 Nov 2024 17:30
Last modified: 22 Nov 2024 03:11
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Author:
Agnieszka Stefaniec
Author:
William Brazil
Author:
Warren Whitney
Author:
Brian Caulfield
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