Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they working at home by choice, or was it forced because of COVID and just continued?
This matters. I hated being on camera during COVID because I live in a one-bedroom apartment and my desk is in my bedroom, which seems a bit invasive to me. I never signed up to work at home, and never had a proper professional-looking environment there. If I had intentionally chosen to work at home, then the situation would have been different, and I would have chosen to live in a place that had a more appropriate-looking environment. Yes, I know that virtual backgrounds exist, but I hate them. They never work that well, and always make me feel that people are trying to hide something. I'm genuinely glad to be back in an office full-time, so none of this is an issue.
Beyond that--does everyone have sufficient network bandwidth to do this?
Yep, I also have a tiny one bedroom apartment and work from my couch. My back faces mirrored closet doors. If I were on camera, everyone could see the entirety of my apartment by looking at the mirrors behind me. I am not interested in showcasing my crappy apartment. The only other place to sit in my apartment is my bed, and that'd be even worse. I don't own a desk or table.
Wow, you don’t own a desk, table or chair and you claim to be working productively from home? I’d say you’re the exact reason why employees should be forced to go on camera sometimes. There are some people who just can’t work from home for whatever reason - inappropriate space, young kids, etc. WFH is not a right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they working at home by choice, or was it forced because of COVID and just continued?
This matters. I hated being on camera during COVID because I live in a one-bedroom apartment and my desk is in my bedroom, which seems a bit invasive to me. I never signed up to work at home, and never had a proper professional-looking environment there. If I had intentionally chosen to work at home, then the situation would have been different, and I would have chosen to live in a place that had a more appropriate-looking environment. Yes, I know that virtual backgrounds exist, but I hate them. They never work that well, and always make me feel that people are trying to hide something. I'm genuinely glad to be back in an office full-time, so none of this is an issue.
Beyond that--does everyone have sufficient network bandwidth to do this?
Yep, I also have a tiny one bedroom apartment and work from my couch. My back faces mirrored closet doors. If I were on camera, everyone could see the entirety of my apartment by looking at the mirrors behind me. I am not interested in showcasing my crappy apartment. The only other place to sit in my apartment is my bed, and that'd be even worse. I don't own a desk or table.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s more than reasonable to require them to have their camera on. I’m sure they would hate it much more if you required them to come into the office. Some people are so clueless and don’t know the good thing they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they working at home by choice, or was it forced because of COVID and just continued?
This matters. I hated being on camera during COVID because I live in a one-bedroom apartment and my desk is in my bedroom, which seems a bit invasive to me. I never signed up to work at home, and never had a proper professional-looking environment there. If I had intentionally chosen to work at home, then the situation would have been different, and I would have chosen to live in a place that had a more appropriate-looking environment. Yes, I know that virtual backgrounds exist, but I hate them. They never work that well, and always make me feel that people are trying to hide something. I'm genuinely glad to be back in an office full-time, so none of this is an issue.
Beyond that--does everyone have sufficient network bandwidth to do this?
Yep, I also have a tiny one bedroom apartment and work from my couch. My back faces mirrored closet doors. If I were on camera, everyone could see the entirety of my apartment by looking at the mirrors behind me. I am not interested in showcasing my crappy apartment. The only other place to sit in my apartment is my bed, and that'd be even worse. I don't own a desk or table.
I bought a room screen and put it behind me when I have to be on work calls.
Anonymous wrote:My team of 8 is fully remote so when we meet, it's on Teams unless we're together in-person for an occasional onsite or retreat. I'm judicious about scheduling team calls - they're biweekly with pre-planned agendas, usually for no more than 45 minutes at a time, so not a heavy lift in my opinion. I'm in my 50s and spent much of my career before 2020 working in person/ in an office. I'm supportive of and like the flexibility afforded by a fully remote workplace, but I feel like it's much more difficult to connect with my employees and build culture in a virtual environment. When I first started at this company a year ago, everyone was on camera for meetings within my team. Now, I find that increasingly most of them stay off camera unless it's a one-on-one. I'm thinking of requiring my staff to be on camera for all meetings within our team. I don't mind if people are dressed casually or have their hair in a ponytail and no make-up. These aren't client-facing calls. Maybe it's my age, but I feel like it's the only way I can know whether people are engaged - seeing facial expressions helps me gauge their response to things and frankly it's also about respecting the person/people speaking. No one likes to talk to a screen of boxes with names in them. I realize the world got by on audio conf calls for a long time, but now we have the option to see each other...so why not do so?
Does your company or department require employees to be on camera for calls? How would you respond/react to this request? I was talking to a peer who leads another team and she attributed this concern to my generation (X) and my response to the evolution of the workplace. Basically she said it was an old fashioned notion, and the young people will hate it. What do you think?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they working at home by choice, or was it forced because of COVID and just continued?
This matters. I hated being on camera during COVID because I live in a one-bedroom apartment and my desk is in my bedroom, which seems a bit invasive to me. I never signed up to work at home, and never had a proper professional-looking environment there. If I had intentionally chosen to work at home, then the situation would have been different, and I would have chosen to live in a place that had a more appropriate-looking environment. Yes, I know that virtual backgrounds exist, but I hate them. They never work that well, and always make me feel that people are trying to hide something. I'm genuinely glad to be back in an office full-time, so none of this is an issue.
Beyond that--does everyone have sufficient network bandwidth to do this?
Yep, I also have a tiny one bedroom apartment and work from my couch. My back faces mirrored closet doors. If I were on camera, everyone could see the entirety of my apartment by looking at the mirrors behind me. I am not interested in showcasing my crappy apartment. The only other place to sit in my apartment is my bed, and that'd be even worse. I don't own a desk or table.