6 reasons why the Indian gig economy will only keep growing in numbers

Posted by: Team | NewsPatrolling September 4, 2019 in Business-News, Economy

When Deloitte released its Mass Career Customization (MCC) program in 2009, Time magazine reported that Chris Keehn was one of the first employees to take advantage of the program. A soft-spoken tax accountant in Deloitte’s downtown Chicago office, Keehn often used to go for 24 hours at a stretch without seeing his 4-year-old daughter awake. Realizing that he wanted to spend more time with his daughter and less time commuting, Keehn took up telecommuting for four days in a week.[1]

Fast forward to the present. Global Workplace Analytics reported the numbers of U.S. employees working from home had increased to an astounding rate of 103 percent over the past decade.[2] A 2015 Gallup survey pegged 37 percent of U.S. workers who say that they telecommute, which is four times greater than the 9 percent who telecommuted in 1995.[3]

Remote workspaces which enable freelancing and support the gig economy work structure are slowly replacing brick and mortar buildings. Randstad India’s 2016 survey on workplace flexibility revealed that 1 in 2 Indian employees prefer telecommuting.[4] As much as the steady but sure change in this trend has been over the past couple of decades, virtual teams working on multiple different freelance projects enabled due to technology and collaboration tools will be the wave that the future of work will ride on. Today, 1 out of every 4 freelancers globally is from India. Platforms such as Flexingit and Lancify are making it easier for them to earn on their own terms.

Keeping up with this trend I would like to shed light on the 6 reasons why I think the Indian gig economy will only keep growing in numbers:

Freelance workers are happier: Remote workers make happier teams: The greatest advantage of flexible work hours that cannot be measured in monetary terms is a happier, less stressed and more motivated workforce.  Eighty-two percent of remote freelance workers reported lower stress levels according to a study by PGI, a leading provider of software services.[7] Such happy and stress free employees can be a huge competitive advantage in the marketplace

[1] http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1898024_1898023_1898076,00.html

[2] http://globalworkplaceanalytics.com/telecommuting-statistics

[3] http://www.gallup.com/poll/184649/telecommuting-work-climbs.aspx

[4] https://www.randstad.in/about-us/press-releases/press-releases/1-in-2-indian-employees-prefer-telecommuting-randstad-survey/

[5] http://bpwfoundation.org/documents/uploads/YC_SummaryReport_Final.pdf

[6] https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/235285

[7] https://remote.co/10-stats-about-remote-work/

 

By:  Bhasker Kode, Founder of Bon Credit