Groundbreaking ideas and research for engaged leaders
Rotman Insights Hub | University of Toronto - Rotman School of Management Groundbreaking ideas and research for engaged leaders
Rotman Insights Hub | University of Toronto - Rotman School of Management

How to create a remote work policy that works everyone

Read time:

Sarah Kaplan, Carmina Ravanera

In the latest episode of the Rotman Executive Summary podcast, professor Sarah Kaplan and Carmina Ravanera from the Institute for Gender and the Economy (GATE) explore how equity and accessibility can play a role in the back-to-office conversation. 

As leaders across corporate Canada continue to test their versions of remote and hybrid work policies, Kaplan says it’s clear the demands of workers are changing.

“Leaders don’t always know how to respond to [changing demands] in terms of how to design work and how to change their policies,” Kaplan says. “And many of them are worried about the effects on inequality." 

Kaplan, Ravanera and their colleague Kim de Laat explored the tensions in their recent report, “The Future of Work: Will Remote Work Help or Hinder the Pursuit of Equality?” The research suggests there’s no one-size-fits-all approach, and both workers and organizations benefit from policies that remove the stigma of remote work. It can be particularly helpful for those in caregiving roles — who happen to be largely women — people of colour who experience micro-aggressions in a traditional office setting and those who can only afford to be homeowners outside of the city.

“[Remote work] increases job satisfaction, people's feelings of motivation when they're working and even job performance," says Ravanera.

Next month on Rotman Executive Summary, associate professor Aida Sijamic Wahid weighs in on the importance of diversifying the demographic, skillsets and perspectives of a company’s board of directors. 

If you missed the previous episode with professor Ming Hu on the future of the sharing economy, click here

New episodes of the Rotman Executive Summary are released monthly on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts and Soundcloud. Desktop listeners can also tune in on Simplecast

Would you rather read than listen in? Check out the full transcript of the episode here


Sarah Kaplan is the director, Institute for Gender and the Economy, a distinguished professor of gender & the economy, professor of strategic management and fellow of the Lee-Chin Family Institute for Corporate Citizenship at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. 
Carmina Ravanera is a senior research associate at the Institute for Gender and the Economy at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management.