UK organisations could enjoy cost reductions and productivity gains running up to £8.1bn, or 0.5 percent of GDP, by optimising their approach to flexible working*, according to a report published by the think tank RSA and Vodafone UK. The potential net value of £8.1bn is the same amount it would cost to build 400 new secondary schools or employ over 200,000 nurses per year.
-
Flex Factor report shows how UK employers and workers could enjoy huge productivity gains and cost savings from enhanced flexible working
-
Findings reveal a robust statistical link between adopting better ways of working and overall organisational performance
The Flex Factor, based on a national survey of 2,828 employees and employers, finds that employees estimate they could gain on average five productive hours per week (for instance from commuting) through better ways of working, which equates to around £4,200 per employee per year.**
While the majority (77 percent), of UK employees work in organisations that offer some kind of flexible working, more than one in ten (13 percent) who want to work flexibly aren’t being offered it, or don’t know they can ask for it. The report reveals that better ways of working are a key driver of productivity, performance and organisational innovation as well as employee satisfaction and wellbeing. 64 percent of those with experience of flexible working say it has enhanced their job satisfaction – providing tangible evidence that personal and performance benefits are closely linked.
The Flex Factor challenges the private, public and voluntary sectors to invest in better ways of working to reduce costs and optimise space, time and resources.
Jeroen Hoencamp, Enterprise Director at Vodafone UK said: "The traditional workplace is dead and British business needs to adopt a new mind-set. Flexible working isn't just working from home and these findings reveal that, with an optimised approach, businesses can overcome any downsides and greatly increase efficiency and productivity, as well as boost their bottom line."
The report states that to realise the full benefits, there needs to be a culture of mutual trust and commitment between employers and employees. It's a psychological contract and success is achieved when both personal and organisational benefits are recognised.
Hoencamp, added: "We want to see organisations and their employees work well and live well. In the global race for growth, organisations should embrace better ways of working consciously as a strategy for success as opposed to ignoring them. Companies can see real, tangible benefits by taking this approach, as this research demonstrates."
Julian Thompson, Director of Enterprise at the RSA added: "Our report aims to capture some of the value better ways of working can bring at all levels of the economy. It's got to be something that organisations and employees develop together as part of a strategy to increase the value of their work."
"Our findings show that there is no 'one size fits all' approach, and that there are costs to be considered. But enabling people to work flexibly can make a significant difference to our economic and social prosperity, both now and in the future."
The Flex Factor highlights some of the costs and downsides associated with flexible working, but also the real benefits, not just to the organisational bottom line, but also in terms of wider society and even the environment.
The research finds that flexible working is linked to better use of employee skills, innovation and personal productivity. By harnessing this potential our economy could become more competitive, innovative and effective.
The report shows:
-
In total, allowing the 13 percent of employees who want to work flexibly right now to do so has a potential net value of £8.1 billion to the UK economy, once costs are taken into consideration:
-
-
Productive hours gained: £6.9bn net potential gain per year (based on closing that 13 percent adoption gap and an conservatively estimated 50 percent implementation cost)
-
Workstation and printing savings: £1.2bn per year (based on closing the 13 percent adoption gap and an 11 percent reduction in office time, meaning reduced workstation and print overheads, at a conservatively estimated 50 percent implementation cost)
-
-
77 percent of employees work in organisations that offer flexible working, of which half have formalised their practices
-
Investment in computing hardware and software is driving flexible working, enabling people to connect with colleagues, knowledge and ideas quickly and effectively wherever they are and whenever they need to
-
46 percent of employers provide their employees with access to a work laptop, one in four employers provide a smartphone and one in ten are now providing tablet computers.
Notes to editors
-
* The CIPD defines flexible working as "A type of working arrangement which gives some degree of flexibility on how long, where and when employees work. The flexibility can be in terms of working time, working location and the pattern of working."
-
** Based on average wages and annual working days.
-
How much the benefits of better ways of working can be realised in practice will depend on a number of factors, including the costs of additional administration, adjustment of internal policies and systems, provision of IT and communications services and possibly the sales costs of additional productive capacity.
-
Find out more information about Vodafone's better ways of working.
Related news
-
Microbusinesses outgunning large firms in the UK’s fastest growing industries
New figures released by the RSA think tank show that microbusinesses now account for the greatest share of employment in some of the UK’s fastest growing industries, including education, computer programming and personal services. The implication is that firms with 9 employees or less are becoming increasingly important to the UK’s economic growth prospects, the RSA said.
-
Government fails to convince new generation of business owners to take on staff
Government schemes aimed at encouraging one-person businesses to take on their first member of staff have had little impact with only 3 per cent of sole traders hiring (and keeping) someone between 2007-2012, according to a report from the RSA.
-
Working five to nine: How a new breed of part-time entrepreneurs are redefining business
Thousands of new part-time self-employed entrepreneurs are set to change the face of British business, as their growing numbers bring new ways of working and challenge what we consider to be the very purpose of running a business, according to a new report by the RSA.
Be the first to write a comment
Comments
Please login to post a comment or reply
Don't have an account? Click here to register.