Workers should expect the same company benefits if they choose to work from home. Let's talk about why.
The pandemic has shaken up a lot of things in our lives, and for many of us, we’ve been forced to face things we never wanted to have to encounter: uncertainty, loss, utter madness, and endlessly binging on junk food. But at the same time, after a year and a half of swimming through its messiness, we’ve also realized we can be incredibly resilient, and kind and compassionate, and productive, creative, and pretty awesome human beings. And the thing is, once we’ve tapped into this powerful knowledge that our lives matter, and that how we choose to live it is a one-shot deal, then the way we start to see things changes. We start to appreciate the value of true, meaningful relationships, and that time is both short and irreversible.
Earlier this year, very shortly after companies started announcing their plans for their workers to return to the office, the Great Resignation began. That’s not a coincidence. Just as many of us started coming into the realization that we are pretty awesome human beings, we also realized we just couldn’t go back to face a workplace where, as reinforced by an article by Gallup, we felt undervalued, disengaged, and lacking of a sense of purpose in our work.
Today, workers are more empowered than ever. They’ve not only reconnected with what’s important to them, but they also now have proof that they can be productive, successful, and contribute to their organization’s business growth while working remotely.
With this environment as the backdrop to all things related to a workplace, it is a big wonder why companies are now starting to either implement, or considering to implement, huge cuts to employee salaries and benefits if they choose to continue to work remotely. Their rationale, which is based on HR policies developed pre-pandemic, is that their salary structure is based on the difference in the cost of living per geography. In most cases, the “geography” refers to the location of the office, and not where a person lives. So, by choosing to work from home, an employee’s “workplace geography” may change, and as a result, so may their corresponding salary structure.
The problem is that there is a failure for these companies to understand that just like the physical workplace itself, all policies related to the workplace experience from 2020 onwards are evolving. And rightfully so.
Let’s start by taking a look at the cost of a workplace experience for employees who were forced to work from home from the start of the pandemic. The only real difference is that employees didn’t have to spend anything on commuting to work anymore. But at the same time, they now have to cover the costs of a proper home office set-up, increased utility and Wi-Fi bills, higher costs for food and coffee, and new expenses like video conferencing equipment, a printer, and a shredder. And most companies acknowledge that even remote workers will need to come into the office a few days a week or a month, so you can’t really knock out commute expenses altogether either. So how would a pay cut justify the increase in all these expenses that are directly related to work?
And then let’s look at the humanistic effects, which, in this new pandemic environment, are more tangible than ever.We’ve seen since early this year that if employees don’t feel that they are valued by their employers, they will join the 4 million others who have walked out in favor of companies that will. And the only message that cutting a remote worker's salary and benefits gives to workers, is that by choosing to work from home, they will be valued less. Well, we already know that kind of messaging hasn’t been working out very well.
If the cost of turnover of one employee includes the total cost of hiring for that position, training the new employee, any severance or bonus packages, and managing the role while it is still being filled, then how exactly would cutting the pay of an employee benefit the company itself? Doing so could be an expensive gamble.
The only message that cutting a remote worker’s salary and benefits gives their workers, is that by choosing to work from home, they will be valued less.
This time of the pandemic has shifted our perspectives inwards. We’ve come to understand ourselves a little better. In the same way, companies need to shift their perspectives inwards as well. Come to understand that truly, their success rests on one word only, and that’s their People. Empowering them to be successful should be the main focus, and not where it is they’re working from. And valuing them as people, as well as workers, is the key to their loyalty, dedication, and happiness.








