Work-life balance is a goal for individuals from all the generations that make up today’s workforce — from baby boomers, who want to care for aging parents and spend time with their grandchildren, to the Gen Zers, who consider work-life balance to be the second most important value proposition for employers to offer. As a result, employers have to step back and evaluate ways to support employees in achieving the work-life balance they desire.
More and more employers are offering some type of flexible schedule policy to address employees’ work-life balance needs. A 2015 Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) survey showed that 54% of organizations offer some type of flexible schedule, and 60% offer some sort of telecommuting policy. A 2018 poll by Flex + Strategy Group showed that 98% of employers offered some type of broadly defined flexible hours.
The 2017 State of Telecommuting in the U.S. Employee Workforce Report showed that 2.9% of the workforce, or 3.9 million employees, work from home at least 50% of the time, compared to only 1.8 million in 2005. That’s a 115% increase in telecommuting and remote work from 2005 to 2017. The report also showed that the average telecommuter is 46 years old, which falls within the Generation X population, a generation that’s older than the millennial and Generation Z demographics we think of when we think of telecommuting.