Is remote work here to stay?

With organizations pivoting to hybrid and remote-work models, enterprises are seeking data center support for critical uptime while workers are remote.

The COVID-19 pandemic changed everyone’s life in many ways, but one of its lasting impacts will be the proliferation of remote work. Across all sectors, and especially IT, remote work environments are becoming commonplace. Even as restrictions were lifted, there was a strong push to make sure that remote work, and by extension, remote work environments, to become standardized.  

So, is remote work here to stay? What can we do to make sure that work-life divisions stay balanced when remote work puts such an emphasis on, well, being at home and working? Are there technological limits to IT as it pertains to remote work and remote work environments? Here’s what we found.  

What remote work looks like now: separated remote work environments 

These days the greatest emphasis on remote work and remote work environments has been on maintaining a good work balance. Since employee workspaces are now also their homes, it places a greater burden on people to separate their work from their home life in new and creative ways. Forbes articulated some of the reasons why separating your home and work life is so important.  

The human body and mind need time and a place to rest and recharge. Making sure that you have a separate space from where you live and where you work is key to making sure that you find a work-life balance remotely. 

For example, if you live in a small apartment where space may be limited, you may not want to work from your bedroom. Using the kitchen space or a small desk in your living area will help reinforce healthy habits by creating a physical boundary between those two environments that your body will react to on a subconscious level.  

What remote work environments may look like in the future 

With the evolving landscape of remote work, the inhibiting factors might be technological. Remote work relies on a correspondingly adequate amount of IT and cloud computing. As organizations use more and more of the cloud, they’ll be dependent on high-powered data centers for their IT and computing needs. The good news? More and more enterprises are moving their computing and IT services to off-site colocation data centers. 

There will also be an increase in technical and security challenges. When IT teams are in one place and a cyberattack affects another, they’ll have to get creative with their solutions. This can include enterprise-grade firewalls, encryption services, and private, protected channels. Yet another reason why it’s so important to trust your computing to a reputable and reliable data center.  

The use of cloud-based services has already become common and popular in this space, but we’ll see it soon become ubiquitous with all sorts of industries — not just tech or financial ones.

How you and your team can be ready for remote work challenges: find a great data center 

Data centers are the backbone of any great remote work environment. They provide security, speed, and great IT services — all of which will be needed from day one for a successful remote work environment. Your team needs to know that they’ll be able to access what they need, when they need it: getting a data center you can trust is a big part of that.

Are you a hyperscale enterprise seeking a data center that can handle your IT needs?  

Schedule a tour today or contact an expert.

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