过去两年多,员工们无法抗拒远程办公的吸引力。但如今在一些求职者眼中,整天穿着睡衣的新鲜感已经消失。
职位目录网站Flexa Career对43,000多个职位搜索和1,200多个就业岗位分析发现,查找完全远程办公岗位的求职者人数减少,而且提供完全远程办公岗位的公司并不多。
分析发现,8月,60%的求职者搜索“完全远程办公”岗位。9月,该类岗位的搜索量减少到44%。同期,完全远程办公招聘岗位的比例从9.27%下降到4.88%。
相反,更多求职者在寻找远程办公优先工作岗位,这种支持混合办公的岗位还支持现场办公。从8月到9月,远程办公优先工作岗位的搜索量占比从近27%提高到46%。
Flexa Careers公司CEO兼联合创始人默里-约翰逊·琼斯在数据发布会上表示:“远程办公优先这种办公环境,既提供了远程办公的自由,也提供了现场办公的选择。”
这意味着求职者并没有彻底放弃远程办公,他们只是不会选择完全远程办公。虽然为了保证员工的幸福感,防止他们加入大辞职浪潮,雇主必须保持灵活性,但这并不意味着只有远程办公才能让员工满意。
虽然有研究显示,完全远程办公员工的幸福感最高,但全美互惠保险(WFH)的研究发现,只有31%的员工希望完全远程办公。研究发现,年轻员工希望完全远程办公的可能性最低,因为他们渴望进行面对面社交。Z世代渴望得到辅导和发展事业,他们认为至少要有部分时间在办公室现场办公,才能实现这两个目的。
思杰系统(Citrix)研究发现,混合办公员工相较于完全远程办公或完全现场办公的上班族,更有可能感受到与公司的联结,工作效率更高。苹果(Apple)和谷歌(Google)等大公司都执行了混合办公政策,尽管执行过程中也曾出现过一些问题。
但远程办公优先工作岗位的搜索量变化,也可能意味着上班族正在不情愿地接受重回办公室的趋势。这种趋势终于在今年美国劳动节取得了进展。数据资产管理与安全公司Kastle Systems的数据显示,自疫情爆发到今年9月,办公室办公的员工数量增加,但到月底人们对于回办公室上班似乎失去了动力。
约翰逊-琼斯表示:“已经结束的夏季办公模式转变过程,可能变成一个年度趋势,意味着雇主在吸引人才方面需要继续保持灵活、敏捷并提供更多选择。”
远程办公似乎已经成为主要办公模式。至少目前来看是这样。(财富中文网)
翻译:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
过去两年多,员工们无法抗拒远程办公的吸引力。但如今在一些求职者眼中,整天穿着睡衣的新鲜感已经消失。
职位目录网站Flexa Career对43,000多个职位搜索和1,200多个就业岗位分析发现,查找完全远程办公岗位的求职者人数减少,而且提供完全远程办公岗位的公司并不多。
分析发现,8月,60%的求职者搜索“完全远程办公”岗位。9月,该类岗位的搜索量减少到44%。同期,完全远程办公招聘岗位的比例从9.27%下降到4.88%。
相反,更多求职者在寻找远程办公优先工作岗位,这种支持混合办公的岗位还支持现场办公。从8月到9月,远程办公优先工作岗位的搜索量占比从近27%提高到46%。
Flexa Careers公司CEO兼联合创始人默里-约翰逊·琼斯在数据发布会上表示:“远程办公优先这种办公环境,既提供了远程办公的自由,也提供了现场办公的选择。”
这意味着求职者并没有彻底放弃远程办公,他们只是不会选择完全远程办公。虽然为了保证员工的幸福感,防止他们加入大辞职浪潮,雇主必须保持灵活性,但这并不意味着只有远程办公才能让员工满意。
虽然有研究显示,完全远程办公员工的幸福感最高,但全美互惠保险(WFH)的研究发现,只有31%的员工希望完全远程办公。研究发现,年轻员工希望完全远程办公的可能性最低,因为他们渴望进行面对面社交。Z世代渴望得到辅导和发展事业,他们认为至少要有部分时间在办公室现场办公,才能实现这两个目的。
思杰系统(Citrix)研究发现,混合办公员工相较于完全远程办公或完全现场办公的上班族,更有可能感受到与公司的联结,工作效率更高。苹果(Apple)和谷歌(Google)等大公司都执行了混合办公政策,尽管执行过程中也曾出现过一些问题。
但远程办公优先工作岗位的搜索量变化,也可能意味着上班族正在不情愿地接受重回办公室的趋势。这种趋势终于在今年美国劳动节取得了进展。数据资产管理与安全公司Kastle Systems的数据显示,自疫情爆发到今年9月,办公室办公的员工数量增加,但到月底人们对于回办公室上班似乎失去了动力。
约翰逊-琼斯表示:“已经结束的夏季办公模式转变过程,可能变成一个年度趋势,意味着雇主在吸引人才方面需要继续保持灵活、敏捷并提供更多选择。”
远程办公似乎已经成为主要办公模式。至少目前来看是这样。(财富中文网)
翻译:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
Over the past two-plus years, employees have been drawn to remote work like a moth to a flame. But as the dust settles, the novelty of wearing pajamas all day has worn off for some job seekers.
Fewer workers are looking for fully remote work jobs and not as many companies are offering them, according to job directory Flexa Career’s latest analysis of 43,000-plus job searches and over 1,200 job postings on the site.
It found that 60% of job candidates’ searches in August were for “fully remote” positions. In September, that dropped to 44%. In the same time frame, the percentage of fully remote jobs advertised fell from 9.27% to 4.88%.
Instead, more workers are seeking remote first positions—hybrid roles that give space for in-office work. The number of searches for remote first jobs rose from nearly 27% to 46% from August to September.
“Remote-first is the working environment that offers both the freedom of working remotely, but also the choice of an office,” Molly-Johnson Jones, CEO and co-founder of Flexa Careers, said in the data’s release.
That means workers aren’t looking to give up remote work entirely; they’re just not going full hog on it. While flexibility remains imperative to keeping employees happy and preventing them from joining the Great Resignation, that doesn’t always mean remote work is the only thing that will keep them satisfied.
While some studies show that fully remote workers are happiest, only 31% of employees want to be fully remote, according to WFH’s research. It found that younger employees are least likely to want to work fully remotely, due to their desire to connect in-person. Gen Z craves mentorship and career growth, two things they feel they can get by being in office, at least part of the time.
Research from Citrix found that hybrid workers were more likely to feel connected and be productive at work than their fully remote or in-person peers. Many big name companies like Apple and Google have taken to hybrid policies, albeit with a bumps along the way.
But the shift in searches for remote-first jobs may also signal that workers are begrudgingly accepting the return-to-office push, which finally made headway this Labor Day. There were more workers in the office in September since the pandemic began, according to data from data property management and security firm Kastle Systems, although office attendance losed a bit of that steam by the end of the month.
“This end of summer transition could be something we see becoming an annual trend, and reflects the ongoing need for employers to remain flexible, nimble and offer choice when it comes to talent attraction,” Johnson-Jones said.
It seems that hybrid work has become the dominant way of work. For now, at least.