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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, March 20, 2006

Telecommuting becoming norm

By BRAD FOSS
Associated Press

Kristen Havens' bedroom doubles as her office. She markets books online, and uses the conveniences of e-mail to stay in touch with her employer. Although the Los Angeles woman finds working at home a bit isolating at times, she enjoys the flexibility it allows her.

DAMIAN DOVARGANES | Associated Press

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Imagine being on a Hawai'i vacation and stepping onto the hotel balcony to watch the sun rise over the Pacific.

Then the phone rings. It's a co-worker from the Mainland. Ready for the conference call?

It happened to Darlene Frudakis, president of PetAg Inc., a Hampshire, Ill.-based pet food maker. Even more surprising was Frudakis's reaction.

"It was just a fabulous feeling," said Frudakis, a full-time telecommuter who is very comfortable blurring the line between work and play. She relishes the "freedom and creativity ... to think outside the box" that comes with being physically detached from her company's headquarters — whether that is at home in Novato, Calif., or on vacation — and says that makes her more productive.

Still, there is a downside to a lifestyle in which the "office" is really a state of mind: "You can't leave," she said.

More than 30 years after the lifestyle began inching into mainstream corporate culture, and in spite of the potential pitfalls, nearly 14 million Americans telecommuted at least part time in 2004, with an additional 7 million running businesses from home, according to the most recent Labor Department data. That's up marginally from 2001, but human resources experts believe the number will continue to climb as more workers are demand flexibility and high-speed Internet connections make it easier to ensure a close-knit relationship between telecommuters and their colleagues and clients.

Last year, 44 percent of U.S. companies offered at least some telecommuting options, according to a survey of 1,043 large employers by Mercer Human Resources Consulting. That is up from 32 percent in 2001.

In the post-9/11 era, corporate America views a work force that can function remotely as a strategic advantage, experts said.

"The reason I think it's gaining momentum is because of natural-disaster preparedness," said Ellen Galinsky, president of the New York-based Families and Work Institute, a nonprofit that researches work force trends for corporations. Galinsky said it was the less centralized companies that were up and running fastest in the days following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Maryella Gockel, who oversees flexible work scheduling at Ernst & Young in New York, believes it is still the employees who are driving the trend. At first the telecommuting bandwagon was led by new mothers who wanted to have more time with their children, she said. Then dads sought similar arrangements. And, finally, employees without children began requesting the same kind of scheduling options their co-workers were receiving — they wanted to devote more time to a hobby or just spend less time in traffic.

Bill Rocco, a mutual fund analyst for Chicago-based Morningstar, has been telecommuting for about nine years, initially from Corvallis, Ore., and now from Ashland, Ore. — a lifestyle he chose so that he could more easily indulge his love of the outdoors. He is at his desk by 7 a.m. — usually in shorts and sneakers — in order to work the same hours as his colleagues in the Central time zone.

Unlike Frudakis, Rocco said "it is really important to draw that boundary" between work and leisure, something he does by turning off the phone at the end of the day and before weekends. "Otherwise it would be too easy to work all the time," he said.

Kristen Havens, who markets books online from her Los Angeles apartment, exchanges e-mails frequently with her employer, but said that "socially, it is more isolating" than being in an office. Havens, an aspiring screenwriter, also writes a blog, and concedes this may be her way to make up for the lack of water cooler chatter in her life.

But these challenges are offset by perks, said Havens, who doesn't miss loud co-workers and loves being able to go to the gym at less busy hours.

More than a dozen people who telecommute or work from home said in interviews that high-speed Internet connections help them feel connected to the workplace. Such technology facilitates a steady flow of e-mail, teleconferences and instant messaging — the modern day equivalent of a tap on the shoulder. Moreover, the growing reliance on such non-face-to-face communication inside the traditional workplace, suggests to them that the distinction between these two worlds is beginning to break down.

"People do get isolated in the cube," said Kevin Remlinger, an information technology project manager for San Jose, Calif.-based Cadence Design Systems Inc. who works from his home in Timonium, Md.

By contrast, Remlinger said being a telecommuter forces him to be more proactive about developing solid relationships with co-workers. Remlinger said he spends about four hours a day on teleconferences — with co-workers in India, China, Germany and France and California — and that as a result "we know each other pretty well."

Jack Nilles, a Los Angeles-based workplace consultant who is widely credited with coining the term "telecommuting" more than three decades ago, said technology has never been the main barrier to a more flexible work schedule. Instead, it has been "the idea fixed in everybody's head that in order to do useful work you had to be someplace where the boss could keep an eye on you."

Fortunately that way of thinking is slowly becoming outdated, Nilles said.

Managers like Frudakis are leading the way.

"When you get away from the office environment," Frudakis said, "you can be more creative in your thought process."

That said, Frudakis visits PetAg's Illinois headquarters once a month and jams in as many face-to-face meetings with senior managers as she can. "I really enjoy being around co-workers," she said.