Friday, July 03, 2009

Telecommuting: Choice 1, Not Second Choice



Cisco News - Remote Workers Are Happier Workers: Cisco allowing employees to work remotely can yield an uptick in work-life flexibility, individual satisfaction and productivity...... more companies are experimenting with various telecommuting strategies to save costs and retain top talent ....... lets people work together no matter where they are located ......... allowing employees to telecommute and telework has generated an estimated annual savings of $277 million in productivity ...... voice (PSTN and VoIP), video, data /web collaboration ..... the goodwill allowing employees the remote option generates. ....... “Through voice and video, I remain engaged and able to lead global teams and programs and avoid back and forth trips to the office... juggling early-morning Europe calls, midday doctor’s appointments and evening Asia meetings. ......... true work-life navigation.” ........ Cisco employees spend about 63 percent of their time communicating and collaborating. Forty percent of Cisco employees say they are not located in the same city as their manager, and across the board the average Cisco employee now telecommutes 2.0 days per week. Sixty percent of the time saved by telecommuting is spent working and 40 percent is spent on personal time ........ 69 percent of the employees surveyed cited higher productivity when working remotely, and 75 percent of those surveyed said the timeliness of their work improved – 67 percent of survey respondents said their overall work quality improved when telecommuting. And Cisco employees reported a fuel cost savings of $10.3 million per year due to telecommuting.
I think the persistent stereotype is that telecommuting is for suckers. You get people into their cubicles if you can. When you can't, you let them telecommute. The problem with that sentiment is that when people are in their cubicles and emailing each other, like it or not, I am going to count that as telecommuting time.

There is a time and place for a phone call, a conference call, and there are times when in-person meetings are the best option, but those times are not always. On the other hand there are some things that can only be done online, they are best done online. How will you share documents with me? How will you collaborate on a document?

Even if I had all my team members in the same town - and if I did, you should get suspiciuos since I am surely not making the best use of the global talent pool - I would want them to work from home most days, and have a weekly party so as to let people get to know each other, engage in team building exercises.

You get to express your individuality in your workspace and your social space. You are more productive that way.

Telecommuting also seems to be the cheaper option. And if workers are happier, is that not a slam dunk?

So instead of building a physical office, why not start out by thinking of telecommuting as the best option, and then going on from there to build the team? Why build a brick office and then hope to dismantle parts of it down the line?

If you still work in a cubicle, that is the case of the naked emperor.

Reimagining The Office
Maybe America Does Not Need To Make Things

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Fluorotherm

Fluorotherm is a fluoropolymer products company that designs, fabricates and sells products all over the world and has a broad customer base in the semiconductor, environmental, biomedical, pharmaceutical, steel, mining, chemical and refinery industries.

Fluorotherm produces many types of precision fluid flow tubing and corrosion resistant heat exchangers. Fluorotherm has two manufacturing sites, in New Jersey and in India.

Fluorotherm has a strong background of research and development in fluoropolymers that has enabled it to offer a wide range of products in a wide variety of markets.
Fluorotherm is a Parsippany, NJ, company. Its key people used to be DuPont employees.

Oracle, Oracle


Oracle has displayed a winning streak during the toughest economy America has seen in 70 years. Oracle has been in the consolidation business for a few years now. The continued execution of that effort over the past year has been remarkable.

You could argue Amazon was another success story of the season in that Amazon was also seen bucking the trend. But those high spirits have not been true for tech companies across the board. So it has not been a tech industry thing. Microsoft was seen engaging in major layoffs like companies facing tough times are wont to do.

Larry Ellison's combination of the visionary and the street fighter was never better at display than during these consolidation fights, the most visible of it was when he gulped down PeopleSoft a few years ago.

Larry Ellison is still very much hungry. His move to buy Sun was very surprising to me. But then is best friend Steve Jobs does both hardware and software, does he not? I think the challenge for Larry is to see if he can offer data centers that are the size of servers.

I watch both Google and Oracle when it comes to the cloud computing space. Larry is on record being skeptical of the very phrase "cloud computing," but it is because he has been doing cloud computing all along. Now they have a term for it.

I think Oracle is well positioned for the impending era. Larry has always wanted to take over Microsoft as the largest software company in the world. I get the impression he has been preparing for that for the last few years in a way he never got to in the 1990s. Now all he needs is a paradigm shift away from the PC.



Larry Ellison
Cisco's Big Dreams: A Clash Of Titans?

In The News

Justice Department: Oracle, Sun Not Getting Hitched Just Yet Seeking Alpha
Securities Suit Against Oracle and CEO Ellison Is Dismissed Wall Street Journal
Hard Times Didn't Stop Oracle's Buying Spree New York Times Oracle, the software giant, made no high-profile purchases in fiscal 2009, but it still managed to quietly spend $1.2 billion buying other companies and assets during the period ...... Oracle reduced its number of United States-based employees while bolstering its ranks abroad
Oracle kept buying in the billions during a troubled year MarketWatch continued apace with its broader mission of expanding its offerings well beyond database software through acquisitions........ Oracle spent $9.4 billion on acquisitions in fiscal 2008 .... Oracle's headcount rose by only 1,767, to 86,000 ....... Oracle reported having 28,000 employees in the U.S.