Story Highlights
- U.S. workers report working remotely an average of 3.8 days per month
- In 2020, the average was 5.8 days; before the pandemic, it was 2.4
- More work remotely during business hours now than did before pandemic
That first graph doesn’t make sense. If you’re going into the office 14 days out of 20 you’re not a remote worker.
Well, keep in mind that that's among people who have ever worked remotely. So elementary school teachers would potentially get lumped in there, for example, and other jobs that were all remote but are now fully in person again.
So me, the guy who tries to go in one day a month for the good coffee and pastries day gets averaged out with the 15 teachers and the accountants who were told they have to come back every day for some reason.
If there are 20 workdays in a typical month, about how many days out of 20 would you telecommute from home instead of going into your workplace?
Depends really some places consider people who work mostly remote as remote. You're logically correct though. Someone who works remote 14 days out of 20 is a hybrid worker.
3.8, I thought, that's really good. Oh… per month… that makes more sense…
I feel like combining fully remote office workers and must be in person jobs like leads to odd averages like that.
I feel like I'd be interested in seeing the trend of "percentage of workers working remotely at least X days per week, by year".
kbin users. If you're wondering why you're seeing this image, that's a feature of Kbin. Weird image caching and what not.
Damn I posted some hot shit.
Well, at least it's not porn this time.