Employer Paid Broadband for
Teleworkers
Will your boss pay
for your home broadband Internet Service? It could happen.
Employers may seem loath to increase
employee benefits. But perhaps it's more the type of benefit
that makes them sneer. What employers really like is benefits
that benefit THEM. So, the trick is to go for benefits that can
be touted as a productivity improvement, cost reduction or both.
Like, for instance ... free home broadband Internet service.
What? Your employer is going
to pay for your broadband at home? No way.
Way. Not just some avant-garde
employer in Silicon Valley, either. According to the CNET news
report, this is no less than the United States government ponying
up for residential high speed Internet service. Specifically,
the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has received permission
from the U.S. Government Accountability Office to reimburse potentially
thousands of employees for broadband Internet connections in
their homes, up to 100% of the monthly ISP connection service.
So, What's the Catch?
There's a catch, right? Yeah, there is. It's the one I alluded
to before. Employers like benefits that benefit the company,
even if they also happen to benefit the worker. To qualify for
this benefit, you have to telecommute from your home up to 4
days a week using the Internet to perform your job with the Patent
Office. Your productivity will be monitored to make sure you
aren't really home watching ball games or surfing the Web far
and wide. You also have to give up your office at the Patent
Office headquarters.
What benefits does the company
derive from this arrangement? Well, that prized office space
will go to the next person in line. Somehow I don't see a lot
of corner office executive types jumping at this opportunity.
But if you're just one of the masses in the bullpen, what's the
big loss? Your home office has got to be quieter even with the
TV blaring. Other organizational and societal benefits are reduced
traffic congestion and pollution in the Washington, DC area and
the expectation that such flexibility in work arrangements will
improve recruitment and retention.
OK, you'll be giving up the daily
thrill of socializing with your beloved colleagues, potential
office romances with the more beloved ones, all the free pens
you can stuff in your inside jacket pocket and the masochistic
thrill of having the boss breathing fire down your collar. But
you'll also enjoy saving the rather large expense of commuting,
have less need to maintain pricey power suits, easily find cheaper
eats, and possibly slash child care costs. Don't forget the FREE
cable or DSL broadband that is used strictly for (wink, wink)
business purposes.
Why Businesses are Interested in Telecommuting
Telecommuting has been a win-win for employers and employees
alike for what seems like eons in Silicon Valley time. Most companies
nationwide have some flexible work arrangements and savvier ones
figure out how to chat up the employee benefit of working from
home in lieu of investing in more bricks and mortar. Now that
the government is getting on board, perhaps telecommuting will
become something of a national strategy to free us from the twin
demons of global warming and foreign oil. All for the price of
little broadband perk.
I tease, but really do applaud
Uncle Sam for a smart move. Suburban commuting is a major energy
and time waster as well as driving, literally, the unhealthy
investment in more and bigger roadways to handle those rush hour
traffic peaks. What our Uncle may have done as well is to establish
home office broadband as a legitimate business expense that employers
will be happy to reimburse. I gotta believe that the corporate
savings in real estate, energy, office furniture & supplies
can easily offset an Internet service that is regularly dropping
in price. Their benevolence in helping you to work from home
might yield cost savings of an order of magnitude or more. Check
the going price of residential broadband service (below) and
see what a bargain it has become. Why, any decent employer should
throw in a company PC and software as well. Right?
How to Find Your Broadband
Options
You can
quickly find high speed Internet service providers serving your
location by using the broadband search engine powered by Shop
For DSL, a Telarus service and BroadBand National. Please enter
the phone number and address of the location where you want the
service, which might be different from where you are right now.
Also include your email address for further information. Within
a minute, you'll have a list of providers offering DSL, cable
Internet and Satellite Internet plus prices, including special
introductory offers. Go ahead, give it a try. This service is
available to you at no cost or obligation. Enjoy!