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Welcome to JALA International, the telework, telecommuting, and applied futures
research experts.
2008 is the 35th anniversary of the words telework and telecommuting;
we coined them and we've been teleworking since the 1960s.
JALA, an international group of
consultants, helps business and government organizations in three
main areas:
We've provided a number of resources here to help you learn more about us, telework, and the future. Check out our services in Latin America. Or you might wish to read Jack Nilles' blog. December 2007 marked the 33rd anniversary of the publication of the seminal research report on telecommuting and telework. The report covers the first large-scale test of telecommuting in a real-world environment—an insurance company. This is where it all began. Thirty years later eMarketer published a report demonstrating that, according to "a survey conducted among 254 global senior business executives by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU)," senior executives are still largely clueless about telework. The issues that worried them in 2004 were the same ones we showed were red herrings in 1974. Here is more information and a photo of the cover of the report. We hope to help rectify the red herring problem here. If you can't wait to see how the next few decades will turn out, go directly to our forecast of telecommuting in the U.S.! To investigate what has been called "the Bible of telework and telecommuting," click on the book cover image below. From the future to the past. The original version of our book The Telecommunications-Transportation Tradeoff was published in 1976. It covers our original demonstration of telecommuting that began in 1973. Long out of print, the book is now available again via Amazon and other on-line book purveyors. If you want the see how the world or telecommuting has changed since 1973 get this book.
One of our main themes is on determining the impact of telework on productivity. The issue is summed up nicely by Paul Graham in his keynote speech to OSCON (the open source convention) as reported by Phil Windley on ZDNet: "The reason companies have fixed hours is that they can't measure productivity. The idea is that if you can't make people work, you can at least prevent them from having fun. If they're not having fun, they must be working! If you could measure what people really did, you wouldn't care when people worked." Put simply, telework works! You can find much tested information about it on this site. You may also obtain more information by e-mail to jala.com. We have also been awarded recognition as a Cool Site by the Open Directory project! Try Mozilla Firefox as your web browser. Whether or not you telework you can help decrease the world's dependence on oil. Check the Detroit Project's web site for more details. Finally, for topics other than the standard ones addressed in our main web pages, or for discussion of telework and other topics, please visit our weblog. News and ArticlesEvade the flu with telework! JALA's blog. Time's Awastin' 2! Telework and Tax Relief? Tsunamis and Telework Telework researchers unite! Teletermination Test your teleworkability Telework and terrorism Telework and disasters Push to start? Time's awastin'! |
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Telepicker is a trademark of JALA International. All other products mentioned are registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective companies. Questions or problems regarding this web site should be directed to info at jala.com. Last modified: Thursday July 3, 2008.
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