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As the pitter patter of raindrops hits the windshield, you tap the brakes and once more find yourself at a dead stop. Your exit is still eight miles away. Someone behind you honks and your navigation app shows an accident up ahead. With your stomach in knots, you call home to say you may miss dinner. Again. After you’ve already missed your daughter’s soccer game.

If you commute any distance to work, you’ve faced commuting nightmares. Accidents, gawkers slowing the flow, bad weather… All the while, our home life continues without us. It’s as though we’re stuck in the middle of a constant tug-of-war between work and home. Dedicating more time to one area usually means sacrificing somewhere else.

How bad is it?
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Americans average 52 minutes commuting each work day, even without delays. And commutes in the New York area are the highest. America’s longest commutes are:

CNN Money: These Cities Have the Longest Commutes in the U.S.

Beyond the annoyance factor, what do long commutes mean in terms of lost time overall? It’s actually pretty frightening.

Earlier in my career, I lived in the “windy city” – good old Chi-Town (number 5 on the list of “worsts”). I loved the city, but hated the traffic. I lived downtown but worked in the suburbs. In most areas, reverse commutes aren’t so bad, but that wasn’t the case in Chicago (at least not back then). Lots of people commute in both directions, and my drive averaged 75 to 90 minutes each way.

What to do?
You can try commuting at off hours, but that often means having to wake before dawn or get home after dark. Mass transit isn’t always an option – there may be closures or available routes aren’t convenient.

It wasn’t until 2005, when we moved to Colorado Springs for my husband’s job with the U.S. Air Force, that it became clear just how much time I was wasting on the road. The closest Cisco office was near Denver, about an hour away. After a few months of making the drive, I realized I was losing three hours each day — two hours in total drive time, plus time to make myself “office ready.”

At the same time, Cisco was re-evaluating office footprints and facilities costs. I made the case with my manager to work from home full time. Shortly after becoming a remote worker, I had my first child. I now have two boys and can’t imagine life chained to a brick-and-mortar office. With a husband who travels (a lot), I’m frequently on my own for school drop-offs, doctor visits, and karate classes.

How can remote work change
your home and work life?
Connecting with my team members anytime from anywhere is what maintains balance in my life. I still see my co-workers every day (from wherever I may be), and I also get to be home when my family needs me. It has been 12 years since I was last in the same office as my manager, yet I get to see and meet with my current manager over WebEx all the time. It’s the best of both worlds.

Take the 30-day challenge
Will it work for you and your team? Try it. Propose a team trial for 30 days and measure your productivity (and, more importantly, your improved sanity). Even if you start with just a few “mobile” days per week – you can rotate who’s out of the office when.



A 6-step formula for a pilot

Step 1: Share this free WebEx trial link with your team lead or your office communications team. Propose a 30-day trial to increase employee productivity while reducing commuting headaches, delayed morning meetings, etc.

Step 2: Once your team lead has approved the trial, make sure each team member also downloads the free WebEx software.

Step 3: Agree to “in office” versus “mobile” days for each team member. Rotating could be a good way to ease your team into the idea.

Step 4: At home, make sure you have a quiet space dedicated to work, including a reliable internet connection.

Step 5: Commit to using WebEx for 30 days – whether in the office or out – to facilitate your team and 1:1 meetings.

Step 6: Most importantly, track, track, track! During the hours you’d normally spend commuting, identify the additional work you’re able to complete. Keep a detailed log that you and your team can evaluate at the end of the trial period. (You may even want to agree to a consistent log format for all team members to use in advance.)


At the end of your trial, once you’ve reviewed all the productivity information — and you’ve experienced how video conferencing with WebEx can keep your team feeling connected — I think that you, too, will wonder how you ever survived without it.

We’ve all wished for more hours in the day… The real secret? We just need to be more productive with the time we already have. Reclaiming those wasted hours means more dinners at home and getting more work done.

Let us know:
Have you shifted to a full or part-time remote schedule? How has it changed your productivity?



Authors

Erin Broecker

No Longer with Cisco