Country for PR: China
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (China)
Tuesday, October 05 2021 - 10:50
AsiaNet
39% of businesses increased productivity with remote work during covid restrictions
SYDNEY, Oct. 5, 2021 /PRNewswire-Asianet/ --

-New report by The Economist Intelligence Unit into productivity and remote work

Two-thirds of business executives believe that remote work will continue in 
some form beyond the pandemic, despite a clear divergence in views over 
employee productivity when working from home, according to a new report, 
Reshaping Productivity, by The Economist Intelligence Unit.

While 39 per cent of survey respondents witnessed an increase in productivity 
in their organisations since the pandemic forced the adoption of remote work 
practices, 32.6 per cent reported a decline in productivity, and the remaining 
28.5 per cent saw no change.

The global survey of more than 360 business executives was conducted in May 
2021 by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Kyocera Document 
Solutions to investigate the implications of remote work on organisations, 
employees and productivity. In-depth interviews were also conducted with 
experts in the field from companies such as Google, Mercer and the Human 
Capital Leadership Institute.

The study found a strong positive correlation between increased productivity 
and employees' support for the uptake of digital tools, such as collaboration 
tools, digital workflow solutions and online project management applications.

"This supports what we've been seeing amongst our own clients managing the 
effects of the pandemic on their workplaces," said Mark Vella( 
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-vella-a639b93/ ), Head of Marketing & Strategy 
at Kyocera Document Solutions Australasia. Case studies of Kyocera clients and 
interviews with senior leadership within the global company provide further 
insight into the report results and the role of digital solutions in driving 
business growth.

"Even before the spread of covid-19, companies had been trying to create more 
flexible working styles," said Hironori Ando, the president of Kyocera Document 
Solutions.

"Those that have invested heavily in the right tools to enable their employees 
to work from home are definitely benefiting in terms of productivity gains, 
business continuity and resilience, and innovation in the current environment," 
added Mr Vella.

In fact, one in five executives who witnessed a decrease in productivity in the 
study said that it was because they hadn't fully implemented the remote working 
capabilities needed for their staff to work from home effectively.

The report concludes that it is the companies that have adapted quickly and 
built their capacity for flexibility throughout the pandemic who will benefit 
most in the future workplace, whatever it looks like.

"Our view is that the future of work is hybrid, and this report goes a long way 
to providing businesses with actionable insights to help them make a successful 
transition to a permanent remote or hybrid work model set-up," said Mr Vella.

Discover more insights into remote work productivity and download the full 
report by visiting the Reshaping Productivity information hub ( 
https://offers.kyoceradocumentsolutions.com.au/productivity-in-the-workplace-report 
).

About Kyocera Document Solutions

Kyocera Document Solutions has championed innovative technology for more than 
60 years. We enable our customers to turn information into knowledge, excel at 
learning and surpass others.

With professional expertise and a culture of empathetic partnership, we help 
organisations put knowledge to work to drive change.

Source: KYOCERA Document Solutions

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