Third of those working from home during pandemic wore pyjamas in meetings – poll

23 March 2021, 07:04

Working from home
Third of those working from home during pandemic wore pyjamas in meetings – poll. Picture: PA

Survey suggests many are experiencing fatigue from video calls but more people favour returning to the office part-time instead of fully.

Almost a third of people working from home during the coronavirus pandemic wore pyjamas during virtual meetings, while one in 10 did not even put on a pair of trousers, according to a YouGov poll.

Findings suggest that around 42% of home workers have experienced “Zoom fatigue” since the pandemic began, though only 14% say they want to return to the office full-time when it is safe.

One in five say they never want to go back.

The research – commissioned by transcription app Otter.ai – comes 12 months after Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the UK an unprecedented lockdown would commence to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

A week earlier, the public was asked to start working from home where possible.

The move has led businesses up and down the country to evaluate the need for office space while employees reap the financial and time savings from no longer commuting, but it has come at the cost of isolation, particularly for those with smaller dwellings.

Of the 2,027 remote workers surveyed – which includes 1,012 from the UK – almost half (45%) would prefer a balance, going into the office between one and three days per week.

The number one reason given for continuing to work from home at least part-time was avoiding the commute (51%), followed by gaining flexible hours (34%).

Two in 10 said they want to carry on working remotely because they get more sleep and 15% say they do not want to wear formal clothes.

However, workplace chatter is the most missed aspect of office life (43%), while poorer productivity is cited as the greatest impact by those who have suffered fatigue from video calls on Zoom and Microsoft Teams.

A third (31%) admitted to having private conversations with friends in the same virtual meeting, as well as wearing pyjamas (30%).

A quarter (23%) also confessed to shopping online during a call and 15% said they had played computer games.

“Our survey shows that work will never be the same as before the pandemic,” said Sam Liang, chief executive and founder of Otter.ai.

“Employees now demand a flexible and hybrid work set-up that meets the new work-life balance and changing attitudes created by working from home for such a long period.

“Zoom fatigue is real and meetings need to be adapted to suit our new working environment, whether that is fundamentally changing the structure of meetings or seeing employees engage with collaboration apps that help with meeting notes and allow the sharing of conversations in real time.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

TikTok on a smartphone

TikTok to begin appeal against possible US ban

The Darktrace wesbite

Darktrace set to leave London Stock Exchange at end of September

An unidentified hacker in dark hoodie performing at a comupter

UK convenes nations for talks on global cybersecurity

Icons of social media apps, including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and WhatsApp, are displayed on a mobile phone screen

Meta to begin training AI on public posts from UK Facebook and Instagram users

JLR Rover the Boston Dynamics robot dog (JLR/PA)

JLR’s new ‘Rover’ is a robotic dog employed to protect brand’s EV facility

The logo and name of the technology company OpenAI on a smarthpone

OpenAI unveils new models designed to think more before answering

A person looking at a mobile phone whose screen has been blurred

Government strengthens Online Safety Act to crack down on revenge porn

Vodafone and Three logos

Vodafone and Three merger could increase phone bills for millions, watchdog says

A mobile phone mast being photographed by a mobile phone

6G network at least a decade away, expert says

A sign for the London underground in central London.

Teenager arrested over Transport for London cyber attack

Cyber security

BT ‘logs 2,000 signals of potential cyber attacks every second’

ChatGPT website with pink lettering displayed on a screen

OpenAI in talks to raise funds at £115bn valuation – reports

Person typing on a laptop

UK data centres to be designated as ‘critical infrastructure’

A plaque outside the offices of the Data Protection Commission in Dublin

Irish watchdog launches probe into Google’s AI model

The technology giant said the growth of cloud computing and artificial intelligence was key to the increasing investment (Niall Carson/PA)

Amazon Web Services ‘to invest £8bn in UK over next five years’

The hands of a person on a laptop keyboard

Most people have no plan for digital assets upon death, Which? warns