Site icon Evangelos Simoudis

Linking Mobility to Work from Home

In the book Transportation Transformation, I stated that several megatrends will necessitate the transformation of urban mobility from one that is centered around the privately owned vehicle to one that is offered as a service, combines multiple modalities, and promotes sharing. The pandemic forced many of us to work from home and have goods delivered there, in the process causing us to rethink our our mobility needs and practices. Work-related mobility deserves important consideration because about 30% of daily urban trips pre-pandemic were related to commuting. Many of the practices that will emerge from this rethinking will have their roots to the changes we made during the pandemic and could lead to a new normal for urban mobility. 

A few days ago, I was catching up with two colleagues. They are both senior professional services executives and neither has relocated during the pandemic. We were discussing the impact the pandemic is having on their daily business activities. Are they productive working from home? Do they find their remote interactions with their clients and their teams as effective as their pre-pandemic in-office interactions? They both said that while they can see themselves working from home a few days per month, they were anticipating a return to the office because they miss the richness offered by the in-person experience for collaboration, mentoring young employees, and certain aspects of management. They also believe that in-office presence will continue to be important for their career advancement. Many of my colleagues’ views correspond to employer and employee survey results (and here) regarding the return to the worksite. Realizing the impending change, some corporations are updating their work from home policies while others change the office environment itself. Today office occupancy in the US remains much lower than pre-pandemic. 

Telework describes the ability to work full-time remotely, including from home, made possible by utilizing a variety of communication channels and technologies. It is different from telecommuting which describes the ability to work remotely for part of the workweek. In other words, my two colleagues want to be telecommuters but not teleworkers. During the pandemic many of us were forced to telework and most had a greater variety of goods delivered to our homes (goods that required quick delivery such as groceries, restaurant orders, and medicines, to goods that could take longer to delivery such as clothing or toys). Combined with health considerations globally we saw the emergence of three transportation-related trends. First, public transportation systems saw dramatic drops in ridership. Second, on-demand mobility services companies involved in passenger transportation also faced a dramatic drop in ridership, whereas mobility services companies involved in goods delivery saw huge demand for their services. Third, after a temporary drop in sales early in the pandemic, automakers, particularly in the US and Asia, saw strong demand for new vehicles, while auto dealers also saw strong demand for used vehicles. 

As economies re-open some of us will have the option to telework, while others will have the option to telecommute. I analyze three alternatives relating to where we choose to work and their implications to cities, mobility services companies, and automakers. 

Increasing adoption of telework

The broad adoption of telework will mean that commute to work trips will decrease, but employees will likely seek larger houses to accommodate their workspace and need for out-of-home recreation, e.g., access to hiking trails. This will cause city-dwellers to either move to the suburbs or to lower-cost cities. We are already seeing such urban migration in the US. It is particularly evident in cities such as San Francisco and New York. Residents of large European cities and large Asian cities are also starting to consider similar moves though we are not yet seeing evidence of urban migration. Such population movements will lead to the growth of certain mid-sized cities, as we are currently seeing in the US with Austin and Nashville, and the need and opportunity to reimagine urban spaces in others (and here), as we are seeing in Paris.  

Telework’s anticipated impact on transportation and logistics can act as the best incentive and opportunity for cities, companies offering on-demand mobility of people and goods, and automakers with a long-term vision to collaborate and transform urban mobility.  

Increasing adoption of telecommuting 

As organizations prepare their post-pandemic plans, several are starting to offer their employees a hybrid option that combines telecommuting for part of the week with onsite work the rest of the time. If most employees do not choose to telecommute on the same day, e.g., Friday or Monday, and will not travel to work at the same time, then telecommuting will result in less crowded public transportation vehicles, reduce the congestion due to ride-hailing, and privately-owned vehicles, and lead to faster and more comfortable commuting. If we further assume that some employees may choose to spend fewer hours at the worksite when they commute there, then, based on analyses we have conducted, we expect even a move to telecommuting will improve work commutes.  

This alternative will offer to cities, mobility services companies and automakers a longer period to determine the best strategies under which to collaborate in order to transform urban mobility since particularly for the first two constituencies the revenue drops will not be as dramatic, and the privately-owned vehicle sales not as robust as they are expected to be under the case where telework is broadly adopted.  

Return to the pre-pandemic commute practices

While to date it remains largely a US phenomenon, it is not yet clear how many people have moved away from their home cities permanently and how many intend to return post-pandemic. Companies will play a big role in this decision. Some have already signaled that they will allow employees to work remotely without any change in benefits, others will require benefit adjustments, while a third category indicates they will return largely to their pre-pandemic worksite practices.

Under this alternative, the cities will be in a tough spot both from the loss of revenues but also due to the potential of increased congestion, pollution, and other factors impacting the urban quality of life. For this reason, for the short-term, they will need to develop strategies for re-acquiring such lapsed customers and acquiring new ones by applying data-driven techniques to understand their post-pandemic transportation needs and promote their new mobility plans. But as is outlined in Transportation Transformation, for the long-term they must take the initiative and demonstrate strong leadership in creating strategies, making the right investments, and offering incentives that will cause mobility services companies, and automakers to collaborate and transform, as appropriate, in order to usher new mobility. Over time, the competition for talent could shift to places that offer the best support telework. 

Office work and, depending on how digitalization and automation continue to advance, other types of work have changed and with them our commute practices and patterns. While it will take some time before we can determine which of these patterns become permanent, the broadening adoption of working from home in the form of telework and telecommuting allows us to consider three alternatives and their impact on work-related commuting. We see these alternatives playing an important role in the way the longer-term urban mobility scenarios first described in Transportation Transformation will unfold and evolve differently depending on geography being considered since transportation and work practices are geography dependent. 

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