Sketch Wrote:
I live in the UK and have been teleworking full time from a work laptop (and corporate VPN) since July 2009. I'm in customer support for a large (over 100K employees) enterprise software vendor. My manager is based in Denver, and his manager is based in northern California. My boss only has four direct reports based in Europe, so face time is minimal barring the occasional conference or training at HQ (NoCal). More and more of our support teams are spreading out like this, so the idea of keeping them in a set office/location is becoming obsolete. While some of my colleagues will work from an office 2 days per week, the company seems to have figured out that pushing people to homework will either 1) make office space for new employees that come in via corporate acquisitions and 2) getting enough people out of one building reduces a load of facilities overhead.
I am appraised twice a year and have had good/great marks ever since homeworking. I don't view home temptations (laundry, errands, video gaming) any differently from those the office (long lunches, 'Net surfing, office cooler chat). Given the aforementioned team structure, they rely on me to be self-sufficient, and I've apparently delivered. I may start/finish work a bit early or late on given days, but I'm expected to be online to take cases from 8:30am-5:00pm taking an hour lunch somewhere in there.
All this said, I've been single and living alone for a majority of the time. I've moved closer to my girlfriend two weeks ago, and the new place still doesn't have live broadband. I'm working from her place (2 bedroom for her + 2 kids, no separate room for office) as a stop-gap, but it has seriously disrupted my, her, and her kids' schedules. Wednesday can't get here fast enough.
in germany you usually have to make sure that you can work in a seperated room or otherwise appropriate situation. though in your case it's just for a couple of days and it shows how important that is.
so basially you work similar to someone in an office and are not able to arrange your working time individually. that's intersting. flexibility as one of the major outcomes of telework for the employee doesn't really count in your case.