Emotional Intelligence at Work

By Michael Miller

Big feelings about remote work<\/strong><\/h3>\n

August 2023<\/em><\/p>\n

The debate about remote work is getting people all fired up.<\/p>\n

Elon Musk called remote work \u201cmorally wrong\u201d and wants people to \u201cget off the god*mn moral high horse with the work-from-home bullsh*t.\u201d<\/p>\n

Okay then!<\/p>\n

LinkedIn influencer and work-from-home advocate Tim Denning shot back that \u201cblaming work-from-home in a lot of companies is just a cop out for bad leadership and a lack of trust.\u201d<\/p>\n

Big feelings!<\/p>\n

Let\u2019s dig into the facts and feelings of the remote work debate – and how emotional intelligence can help.<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

Remote work stabilizes – and polarizes<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

Flexible work is no longer a temporary pandemic response but an enduring feature of the modern working world. Remote work has stabilized post-COVID at about 25% of all paid working days, per the\u00a0Global Survey of Working Arrangements<\/a>. Globally, that means full-time workers spent an average of basically 1 day (.09) working from home. That\u2019s a\u00a0fivefold<\/strong>\u00a0increase from 2019.<\/p>\n

There are some important regional variations in how often people work from home. Levels are higher in English-speaking countries, for example: Full-time employees worked an average of 1.4 full paid days per week from home across Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK and the US (compared to 0.7 in Asia, 0.8 in Europe, and 0.9 in Latin America).<\/p>\n

But when asked how many days employees\u00a0would like<\/em>\u00a0to work from home, those regional differences disappear. On average, employees want nearly double (2.0 days per week) what employers are currently offering, a gap that is present in all 34 countries in the survey. That leads us to the heart of the remote work dilemma:<\/p>\n

Most employees like hybrid and remote work and, on the whole, want even more of it. Many leaders feel threatened by it and want to go in the opposite direction. CEOs are increasingly calling employees back to the office,\u00a0even against employee\u2019s wishes<\/a>, and in some cases,\u00a0seemingly without any evidence as to why.<\/a><\/p>\n

How can we apply emotional intelligence to the remote work debate?<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

4 rules for remote work – and how emotional intelligence can help<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

Here are 4 principles about remote work and how to apply emotional intelligence:<\/p>\n

1. There is no one-size-fits-all solution<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

When given an option to work remotely, 9 out of 10 employees take it. This dynamic is widespread across demographics, occupations, and geographies. But in terms of how many days employees want to work remotely vs. in person, there is almost no consensus. Check out this graph:<\/p>","tablet":"

Big feelings about remote work<\/strong><\/h3>\n

August 2023<\/em><\/p>\n

The debate about remote work is getting people all fired up.<\/p>\n

Elon Musk called remote work \u201cmorally wrong\u201d and wants people to \u201cget off the god*mn moral high horse with the work-from-home bullsh*t.\u201d<\/p>\n

Okay then!<\/p>\n

LinkedIn influencer and work-from-home advocate Tim Denning shot back that \u201cblaming work-from-home in a lot of companies is just a cop out for bad leadership and a lack of trust.\u201d<\/p>\n

Big feelings!<\/p>\n

Let\u2019s dig into the facts and feelings of the remote work debate - and how emotional intelligence can help.<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

Remote work stabilizes - and polarizes<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

Flexible work is no longer a temporary pandemic response but an enduring feature of the modern working world. Remote work has stabilized post-COVID at about 25% of all paid working days, per the Global Survey of Working Arrangements<\/a>. Globally, that means full-time workers spent an average of basically 1 day (.09) working from home. That\u2019s a fivefold<\/strong> increase from 2019.<\/p>\n

There are some important regional variations in how often people work from home. Levels are higher in English-speaking countries, for example: Full-time employees worked an average of 1.4 full paid days per week from home across Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK and the US (compared to 0.7 in Asia, 0.8 in Europe, and 0.9 in Latin America).<\/p>\n

But when asked how many days employees would like<\/em> to work from home, those regional differences disappear. On average, employees want nearly double (2.0 days per week) what employers are currently offering, a gap that is present in all 34 countries in the survey. That leads us to the heart of the remote work dilemma:<\/p>\n

Most employees like hybrid and remote work and, on the whole, want even more of it. Many leaders feel threatened by it and want to go in the opposite direction. CEOs are increasingly calling employees back to the office, even against employee\u2019s wishes<\/a>, and in some cases, seemingly without any evidence as to why.<\/a><\/p>\n

How can we apply emotional intelligence to the remote work debate?<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

4 rules for remote work - and how emotional intelligence can help<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

Here are 4 principles about remote work and how to apply emotional intelligence:<\/p>\n

1. There is no one-size-fits-all solution<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

When given an option to work remotely, 9 out of 10 employees take it. This dynamic is widespread across demographics, occupations, and geographies. But in terms of how many days employees want to work remotely vs. in person, there is almost no consensus. Check out this graph:<\/p>"}},"slug":"et_pb_text"}" data-et-multi-view-load-tablet-hidden="true">

Big feelings about remote work

August 2023

The debate about remote work is getting people all fired up.

Elon Musk called remote work “morally wrong” and wants people to “get off the god*mn moral high horse with the work-from-home bullsh*t.”

Okay then!

LinkedIn influencer and work-from-home advocate Tim Denning shot back that “blaming work-from-home in a lot of companies is just a cop out for bad leadership and a lack of trust.”

Big feelings!

Let’s dig into the facts and feelings of the remote work debate – and how emotional intelligence can help.

Remote work stabilizes – and polarizes

Flexible work is no longer a temporary pandemic response but an enduring feature of the modern working world. Remote work has stabilized post-COVID at about 25% of all paid working days, per theGlobal Survey of Working Arrangements。Globally, that means full-time workers spent an average of basically 1 day (.09) working from home. That’s afivefoldincrease from 2019.

There are some important regional variations in how often people work from home. Levels are higher in English-speaking countries, for example: Full-time employees worked an average of 1.4 full paid days per week from home across Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK and the US (compared to 0.7 in Asia, 0.8 in Europe, and 0.9 in Latin America).

But when asked how many days employeeswould liketo work from home, those regional differences disappear. On average, employees want nearly double (2.0 days per week) what employers are currently offering, a gap that is present in all 34 countries in the survey. That leads us to the heart of the remote work dilemma:

Most employees like hybrid and remote work and, on the whole, want even more of it. Many leaders feel threatened by it and want to go in the opposite direction. CEOs are increasingly calling employees back to the office,even against employee’s wishes, and in some cases,seemingly without any evidence as to why.

How can we apply emotional intelligence to the remote work debate?

4远程工作规则,如何情感智能igence can help

Here are 4 principles about remote work and how to apply emotional intelligence:

1. There is no one-size-fits-all solution

When given an option to work remotely, 9 out of 10 employees take it. This dynamic is widespread across demographics, occupations, and geographies. But in terms of how many days employees want to work remotely vs. in person, there is almost no consensus. Check out this graph:

No matter what remote work policy a company lands on, if it\u2019s the same for everyone, well over half the employees won\u2019t get their first choice. And even if everyone was magically satisfied, it wouldn\u2019t last long: Research suggests that employee preferences vary by age and life stage, with workers in their 20s, 50s and 60s working a smaller percentage of days from home than people in their 30s and 40s. This makes sense. Young workers in their 20s often benefit from professional development and mentoring, which is best carried out in person. And people in their 30s and 40s with young children need the schedule flexibility to meet child care demands. There is no one-size-fits-all solution – and there won\u2019t be.<\/p>\n

How to apply emotional intelligence:<\/strong>\u00a0It\u2019s essential for organizations to differentiate and personalize. When possible, provide flexibility and space for people to develop authentic, powerful, individual solutions – that honor and work with the complexities of real people!<\/p>\n

\u00a0<\/h3>\n

2. Choice is critical<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

Research suggests there are many benefits to letting employees have a voice in where and when they get work done. CEOs may genuinely believe that the company\u2019s culture is under siege by work-from-home, but\u00a0is a culture of dissatisfied compliance what you\u2019re going for?<\/a>\u00a0\u201cRarely have people embraced culture when they\u2019re forced to do something,\u201d says Dan Kaplan, a senior client partner in Korn Ferry\u2019s CHRO practice.<\/p>\n

In fact, research from Gallup found that when employees are required to work fully on-site, but they would prefer to work hybrid or fully remote, employees experience:<\/p>\n

Emotional intelligence (EQ) = being smarter with feelings

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Introduction to the EQ tests Individual EQ Assessments
Find the right assessment with the Tool Finder Organizational Emotional Intelligence Tests

Build capacity for transformation

Six Seconds started the world's first EQ Practitioner Certification and is widely known as the global leader in how to develop emotional intelligence. Public & in-house EQ certification.

Start with Unlocking EQ →

See all Certifications →

Explore Professional Accreditations:

Certified EQ Consultant Certified EQ Facilitator
Certified EQ Coach Certified Social Emotional Learning Specialist

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Six Seconds started the world's first EQ Practitioner Certification and is widely known as the global leader in how to develop emotional intelligence. Public & in-house EQ certification.

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See all Certifications →

Explore Professional Accreditations:

Certified EQ Coach Certified Social Emotional Learning Specialist
Certified EQ Consultant Certified EQ Facilitator

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