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Press release #Working at Bosch
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Bosch simplifies telecommuting, private phone calls, and internet use at the workplace

Focus on results, not physical presence

  • Consistent rules make telecommuting easier
  • Personal e-mails, web access, and phone calls at the workplace
  • Chief personnel officer Kübel: “Flexible working models should be the norm”
  • Combined works council chairman Löckle: “A clear set of rules that gives our associates more freedom”
Trix Boehne

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Stuttgart – Bosch has introduced a consistent set of rules that simplify telecommuting. It is also allowing its associates to manage personal e-mails,
surf the web, and make private phone calls at the workplace. The supplier of technology and services is aiming to continue its move away from a culture of physical presence to a more flexible one that focuses on results. At the same time, this move helps Bosch achieve a better balance between work and private life. Together with the combined works council, two new combined works agreements have been drawn up that will apply to Bosch associates in Germany. Bosch recently put in place guidelines for a flexible, family-friendly working culture.

Culture change for more freedom and creativity
“The reason we want to drive this change in our working culture forward is that we are convinced that flexible working models are beneficial,” says Christoph Kübel, member of the board of management and director of industrial relations at Robert Bosch GmbH. “Giving associates the choice of where and when to work increases job satisfaction, delivers better results, and strengthens creativity.” Kübel adds that this is why Bosch wants to make telecommuting the norm.

Simplifying flexible working
Telecommuting is already an option at Bosch. But new, simpler rules for associates and executives are set to make it even easier to choose where and when to work. Until now, associates had to get their supervisor’s individual approval before they could work temporarily at another location or from home. Now associates have the fundamental right to do so, provided this is compatible with their job. In manufacturing operations as well, management is working to introduce flexible solutions, including shift arrangements that are compatible with part-time working and systems that allow associates to stand in for one another. “We hope that flexible shift systems will benefit the company and its associates to an equal degree, serving the business interests of the one while allowing the others to reconcile the demands of family and working life,” says Alfred Löckle, the chairman of the combined works council.

Personal e-mails, phone calls, and web access at the workplace
From now on, anyone at Bosch who wants to surf the web or use internet banking during their lunch break, say, will be able to use their Bosch company PC to do so. Associates may also use their company e-mail address or company phone to conduct personal business. In a world where work and personal life are connected, Bosch wants to make its associates’ everyday work easier. “I have a smartphone of my own,” says Arne Brixel, a production planner at the Bosch plant in Stuttgart-Feuerbach, “but it’s definitely more convenient to use my work laptop to book a train ticket or quickly pay a bill.”

Guiding principle – a better balance between work and private life
Bosch already offers its associates around 100 working models, including various part-time options, job sharing, and working from home. “That’s why we have also made sure the rules make a clear distinction between work and private life,” Löckle says. “Every associate can define break times and set time periods in which they do not wish to be disturbed.” Guidelines for associates and for executives will help them both to make use of the advantages of telecommuting and to overcome their reservations. Löckle feels executives have a particular responsibility in this regard: some bosses also have to learn to let go, and to accept that mere physical presence should not be confused with hard work.

More focus on results, less physical presence
The consistent rules for telecommuting give associates clarity on issues relating to logging their working hours, insurance coverage, and information security. In accordance with employment law and collective-bargaining arrangements, hours worked while telecommuting will be logged as normal. It will even be possible to make up for free time taken during the week by catching up with work on a Saturday. Bosch sees its clear commitment to telecommuting as an important step toward achieving a better balance between work and private life. “Many of the associates in my team can work just as well from home or from the office using a laptop and a cellphone,” says Anne Cater, a department head at the Bosch Thermotechnology division’s Lollar location. “Our Bosch Connect social business network also makes it easier for associates to work together no matter where and what time of day they are working.”

Internet:
Bosch as an employer: www.bosch-career.com
Guidelines for a flexible working culture at Bosch:http://bit.ly/ZRVR5Z
Balancing work and private life at Bosch:http://bit.ly/1vQqaDN

Video:
MORE project: Bosch managers test flexible working models (German):
http://youtu.be/d5rQBjMrj_g

Background information:
Press release “Bosch adds to its family-friendly working culture”:
http://bit.ly/1r6eVqV

Press release “500 Bosch executives test flexible working models”:
http://bit.ly/1ndWeBU

Tags: Phone, Internet,

About Bosch

The Bosch Group is a leading global supplier of technology and services. It employs roughly 429,000 associates worldwide (as of December 31, 2023). The company generated sales of 91.6 billion euros in 2023. Its operations are divided into four business sectors: Mobility, Industrial Technology, Consumer Goods, and Energy and Building Technology. With its business activities, the company aims to use technology to help shape universal trends such as automation, electrification, digitalization, connectivity, and an orientation to sustainability. In this context, Bosch’s broad diversification across regions and industries strengthens its innovativeness and robustness. Bosch uses its proven expertise in sensor technology, software, and services to offer customers cross-domain solutions from a single source. It also applies its expertise in connectivity and artificial intelligence in order to develop and manufacture user-friendly, sustainable products. With technology that is “Invented for life,” Bosch wants to help improve quality of life and conserve natural resources. The Bosch Group comprises Robert Bosch GmbH and its roughly 470 subsidiary and regional companies in over 60 countries. Including sales and service partners, Bosch’s global manufacturing, engineering, and sales network covers nearly every country in the world. Bosch’s innovative strength is key to the company’s further development. At 136 locations across the globe, Bosch employs some 90,000 associates in research and development, of which nearly 48,000 are software engineers.

The company was set up in Stuttgart in 1886 by Robert Bosch (1861–1942) as “Workshop for Precision Mechanics and Electrical Engineering.” The special ownership structure of Robert Bosch GmbH guarantees the entrepreneurial freedom of the Bosch Group, making it possible for the company to plan over the long term and to undertake significant upfront investments in the safeguarding of its future. Ninety-four percent of the share capital of Robert Bosch GmbH is held by Robert Bosch Stiftung GmbH, a charitable foundation. The remaining shares are held by Robert Bosch GmbH and by a corporation owned by the Bosch family. The majority of voting rights are held by Robert Bosch Industrietreuhand KG. It is entrusted with the task of safeguarding the company’s long-term existence and in particular its financial independence – in line with the mission handed down in the will of the company’s founder, Robert Bosch.

Additional information is available online at www.bosch.com, www.iot.bosch.com, www.bosch-press.com.

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