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Advances in technology allow
workers to be less tethered to the office
by Paula
C. Squires
for Virginia Business
April 2006
Today’s work force is
becoming more mobile. With an assist from technology,
many workers are saying
goodbye to the morning commute, preferring instead
to work from their home, or other places, with only
occasional trips to the office. The trend is evident
at some Virginia companies as the definition of work
and office continues to change.
For instance, at Richmond-based
CyMed only 5 percent of the company’s 800 medical transcription workers
operate from a traditional office. The rest work from
home, says Dale Kivi, CyMed’s vice president
of business development. Meanwhile, nearly 40 percent
of Capital One Financial Corp.’s Richmond work
force is participating in a pilot program that gives
employees choices on how they work.
High-speed Internet access,
instant messaging, voice recognition editing and
security encryption are some
of the technologies that allow Cymed, the country’s
third-largest domestic employer of medical transcriptionists,
to operate a virtual work force. With workers in 45
states and various time zones, the company offers clients
24-hour coverage. “We’ve got people typing
up reports in Florida that live in Hawaii,” says
Kivi.
Companies such as CyMed have been able to move medical
transcription workers from the hospital to the home
only in the past five to seven years. The results of
the shift, says Kivi, are cost and space efficiencies
for hospitals and flexible work schedules for employees.
Federal law requires doctors
to make a medical record of a patient’s diagnosis and treatment, a document
that starts the billing process. Because hospitals
can now outsource this function, some are seeing big
cost savings. One of Cymed’s major clients, Rockford
Health System in Illinois, spent $1.8 million on medical
transcription in 2002, says Kivi. After switching to
CyMed, the company spent $800,000 in 2004. “We
were able to save them a million dollars and to reduce
their costs,” notes Kivi (by more than 50 percent).
In addition, an employee who
used to type in a hospital office can now work from
home and knock off at 3 p.m.
if she has children returning from school. According
to Kivi, 95 percent of CyMed’s transcription
workers are women in their late 40s and early 50s,
and some have children and want a flexible work schedule.
How does CyMed manage its virtual
work force? With the same technology that makes worker
mobility possible.
Account managers use instant messaging to interact
with workers and notify them quickly about changes
in workflow or priority status for reports. A quality
control team monitors misspellings, productivity
and turnaround time. “Because of the distance and
the fact that you don’t visually see employees,
you have to manage them by the technology of how they
do their jobs,” says Kivi.
Technology is one of the driving
forces behind a move at Capital One to try out a
future-of-work program.
Of the credit card company’s 4,300 employees
at its Goochland County West Creek campus, 1,700 are
enrolled in a pilot program that gives them several
work options. After getting manager approval, workers
can be anchor or resident employees (with a desk at
the office), mobile workers (where they come and go
without a permanent space); or they can opt for a flexible
arrangement (working primarily from home). “What
we have found is that it is so popular to be mobile
that many more people want to be mobile,” says
Larry Ebert, Capital One’s vice president of
corporate real estate.
Mobile employees are equipped
with laptops and a wireless network, so they can
plug into Capital One’s
network from almost anywhere.
Communication also occurs
via e-mail, instant messaging and through use of
BlackBerries. “They
can come in, go to a meeting, work outside in this
treehouse space we have, work from home,” says
Ebert. Does such freedom pose supervisory challenges? “If
you have a highly talented, knowledge-based work force
and they understand their goals and performance objectives,
our folks don’t need someone looking over their
shoulders telling them what to do,” says Ebert. “They’re
motivated.”
The company is seeing cost
benefits from the pilot program, though it won’t release figures. The
buildings at West Creek were designed to house 600
workers, but Ebert says they can now accommodate up
to 1,000 since not everyone works from a desk at the
campus every day. “If you can fit twice as
many people in a building, you can reduce your portfolio,
which obviously results in cost savings. That enables
you to invest in technology and training and the
amenities
we provide.”
As the company continues to
research the pilot program and survey employees,
Ebert expects it to be offered
to other Capital One business lines. “I think
as we see the aging of the work force and more young
people coming in, you will see more of this, because
that’s the way young people are used to working”
Still, employees have one reservation:
If they’re
not visible around the office, can they still get promoted?
That question came up during a recent summit on work
sponsored by the Greater Richmond Technology Council.
Speakers there said success depends largely on a worker’s
productivity and performance, which tend to remain
constant, no matter the work environment.
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