Disaster Recovery Business Continuity Planning — Challenges for Remote
Office Locations


Advances in collaboration and communication technology in recent years have
made sharing documents, video conferencing/desktop-sharing and instant messaging
second nature to most people who work in the IT market.


In a recent Harvard Business Review Blog postion they argue that remote
employees are more engaged and connected, and employers are really the ones
benefitting from all this.


Employees who work remotely, of course, don’t require a physical office and
many times use most of their own hardware and software, says Perlman. It’s also
worth noting that, according to BLS statistics, remote employees work on average
an hour longer each day than their brethren in the office, which can equate to
almost six extra weeks of productivity over the course of the year.


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