Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNoah McLaughlin Modified over 9 years ago
1
EMERGENCE Riga, April 4, 2002 eWork in a Global Economy: Some Results from the EMERGENCE Project Ursula Huws Institute for Employment Studies TELEBALT WORKSHOP
2
EMERGENCE A new spatial division of labour in knowledge work The combination of telecommunications and computing (telematics) is bringing about major changes in who does what work, where, when and how There are new choices open to both employers and workers in the organisation of work in time and space
3
EMERGENCE Estimation and Mapping of Employment Relocation in a Global Economy in the New Communications Environment
4
EMERGENCE The EMERGENCE Project AIMS Measure the extent of eWork Identify forms and characteristics of eWork Identify favoured locations for each eActivity Find reasons for choice of location or supplier Explore dynamics of relocation Investigate employment implications Identify constraints and facilitators Identify indicators for future modelling and tracking Inform regional development strategies
5
EMERGENCE Individualised forms of eWork fully home- based eWorkers multilocational eWorkers elancers e-enabled self- employed
6
EMERGENCE Employers’ use of telehomeworking, by country
7
EMERGENCE Projected growth of telehomeworking in Europe to 2010
8
EMERGENCE Employers’ use of multilocational eWorkers, by country
9
EMERGENCE Projected growth of multilocational eWorkers in Europe to 2010
10
EMERGENCE Employers’ use of eLancers, by country
11
EMERGENCE Projected growth in eLancing in the EU, to 2010
12
EMERGENCE eEnabled self employment: projected growth to 2010 based on continuation of existing trends
13
EMERGENCE Estimates of telehomeworkers, eEnabled workers and eEnhanced workers in Europe, 2000
14
EMERGENCE Projections of telehomeworkers, multilocational eWorkers and eLancers, 2010
15
EMERGENCE Office-based forms of eWork remote back offices (employees) eOutsourcing telecentres or telecottages
16
EMERGENCE E-work in Europe (demand side) by type of e-work (% of establishments with >50 employees) Source: EMERGENCE employer survey, 2000
17
EMERGENCE Use of outsourced business services (% of establishments with >50 employees) Source: EMERGENCE employer survey, 2000
18
EMERGENCE eWork demand by business function (% of establishments with >50 employees) Source: EMERGENCE employer survey, 2000
19
EMERGENCE eWork supply in Europe by country (% of establishments with >50 employees) Source: EMERGENCE employer survey, 2000
20
EMERGENCE eWork supply by business function (% of establishments with >50 employees) Source: EMERGENCE employer survey, 2000
21
EMERGENCE Reasons for choice of eOutsourcer (reasons for choice of location, % of all outsourced services) Source: EMERGENCE employer survey, 2000
22
EMERGENCE Typology of eWork Relocation
23
EMERGENCE Relocation of customer services call centres Motives availability of workers, costs, corporate restructuring Metropolitan versus rural areas Importance of information and communication technology
24
EMERGENCE Relocation of software- development and IT support Motives and aims of relocation Recruitment problems - labour market oriented relocation Skill oriented relocations Cost oriented relocations Centralisation; economies of scale
25
EMERGENCE Organisational and technical challenges Facilitators Technical Infrastructure and ICT utilisation Contacts in destination location and support by parent company High degree of division of labour standardisation and formalisation Involvement of employees Organisational change and transfer of knowledge
26
EMERGENCE Outsourcing over the Internet (Intermed Case Study) “I have never heard Kirill‘s voice”
27
EMERGENCE Software-Development in Poland (Betty Case Study) “Without personal contacts one wouldn‘t do that”
28
EMERGENCE Tele-Cooperation (Brandfree Case Study) “Once they saw that I didn‘t have two heads things instantly improved“ “Once they saw that I didn‘t have two heads things instantly improved“
29
EMERGENCE Employment effects Positive employment effects in ‘expansion’ and ‘complementing’ type relocations Loss of jobs in ‘concentration’ and ‘replacement’ type relocations Qualitative employment effects High demands on mobility of employees How long is the butterfly going to stay?
30
EMERGENCE implications for the Baltic region Opportunities to develop individualised forms of eWork Major opportunities to supply eServices to the EU and other developed countries BUT Need to compete with the rest of the world Necessity for Infrastructure Skills, including language skills Effective marketing Understanding of EU business cultures
31
EMERGENCE For more information go to www.emergence.nu www.analytica.org.uk www.employment-studies.co.uk
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.