Contents
- Hey! Welcome Back -
- Jack Nilles: Bad Names for Good Times
- Plot Twist: Remote is More Social Than the Office
- This Weekâs Shareable
- Latest Remote Jobs
There has to be a better name for it out there somewhere.
đŽ Remote work: Mildly better than telecommuting
đ Plot twist: A term by any other name
Hey! Welcome Back -
I thought Iâd keep things light this week by reintroducing a topic Iâd love your feedback on. After all that Christmas food, light is definitely on the menu!
So, this week Iâm going to talk about how much remote work sucks. No, not the movement â the name. Can we all agree that this term needs an upgrade?
Hereâs the thing â
Jack Nilles: Bad Names for Good Times
Remote work is a trash name for a treasure-trove of improvements in the working world. The only term worse than this is âtelecommutingâ which sounds like something your grandpa would have used during the dial-up internet era.
Telecommuting was the original term coined by Nasa super-brain turned futurist, Jack Nilles in 1973.
âïž He defined it as:
âthe substitution of telecommunications and/or computers for commuting workâ
The term makes him the founding father of remote work â thank you Jack! Since the 70âs itâs evolved to become a series of increasingly interesting and abominable names.
đ€ When you hear the word remote: what do you think of?

For me, itâs a tiny, isolated house in the middle of nowhere. Maybe once upon a time this is how people imagined remote workers -disconnected from the world.
But hereâs the truth. Remote work isnât remote.
Itâs less isolating than itâs ever been!
Sure, you wonât spend as much time at the office. But unless youâre a wizard or a Yeti â youâre far more likely to find yourself in a lush co-working spot, or a personalized home-office - than in a tiny house in the boonies.
Plot Twist: Remote is More Social Than the Office
The reality is that big companies donât want you to realize the truth.
That remote workers get to be far more social than office workers do. Itâs the old switcheroo, and everyone should know it.

The time you save commuting can be reinvested in:
đšâđ©âđ¶âđŠ Closer family dynamics
đ Seeing your friends more often
đ Being a genuine part of your local community (not just on weekends!)
Donât take my word for it.
Since the pandemic began there have been dozens of studies on the positive effects of people leaving the big cities and relocating to smaller towns.
đ People are happier (do great work without missing out on family time)
đ Small businesses are thriving
đïž Small towns are getting an economic boost
Everyone has benefitted except corporate real estate.
Thanks to technology, weâve learned that working in a different room from your co-workers doesnât have to be an isolating experience.
The right word isnât remote. We need to find one that fits better.

đ
The first one that comes to mind is âconnected workâ because even though youâre still plugged in at work, youâre MORE connected to the things that matter.
Can you think of a better name for remote work? Get creative!
And remember, the future of work is Out of Office.
Andrew
This Weekâs Shareable
- Are âremote workâ and âtelecommutingâ really the best that we can do? With so much evidence proving that remote working is MORE social - we need a fresh name. Read more on OOO this week.

Go ahead and share this handy infographic on remote work terms.
Latest Remote Jobs
Do you see your dream job in this list? Time to apply.
đ„ Chief of Staff at Trilogy / $100K ($50/hour)
đ„ Academic Dean at Alpha / $100k ($50/hour)
đ„ Reading Specialist Brownsville Campus at Alpha / $100k ($50/hour)



