As the world has emerged from the once-in-a-century experience of a global pandemic, we find that a new social contract is being created between office employees and employers. Most organizations have settled into an agreement that hybrid work balances management’s desire to see their subordinates with workers’ desires to reduce the time spent in mind-numbing commuting.
These issues will probably not get settled quickly or neatly, but while the office world is sorting things out it is worth taking a step back and considering the ways that the office was never the work nirvana that some say it was.
But, before we put our office space up for sublease and send everybody to work from home,
Company Culture. There is actually some decent research on this that offers insight into what company culture is and how to nurture it. Professor Bradford Bell at Cornell University has studied the issue and describes company culture as the unwritten norms for behavior.
According to Bell, “Company culture is really about the connection that employees have, number one, to a company. Culture is important for signaling what companies value.“
Does the company value new independent thinking or is more importance placed on tradition? Is it okay to bend or break rules to achieve a beneficial outcome or is it critical to respect policies and procedures? Either might be valid depending on the industry, but stress and strife occur where there is misunderstanding within an organization.
Human Connection. Human beings vary in their need for social interaction, but in general, people are social animals and need some periods of face-to-face interaction with others. In a work setting, this is important for building bonds between teammates which is a major factor in workplace engagement. Although video conferences are better than phone calls and time for informal sharing can be built into weekly video team meetings, the forced nature of the medium is not as good as the old-fashioned water cooler talk.
Robust Collaboration. If ever there was an over-used and misused term, it might be “collaboration." The reality is that the majority of company meetings are one-way deliveries of information that could have been done by email or are perfectly fine with a Zoom or Teams meeting. However, there are certain types of meetings where an in-person format is much better than a video conference such as discussions where a high degree of interactivity is important like brainstorming, difficult topics such as a performance review where non-verbal feedback is crucial, and strategic planning where it may be essential to draw out everyone’s views.
Learning and Mentoring. Perhaps the greatest casualties in the several years of remote work during the pandemic were employees starting their careers that were robbed of the opportunity to learn from their coworkers. Most jobs require knowledge that goes beyond what can be learned from a book, videos, or class. This real-world knowledge is most effectively gained in an informal, unstructured environment. This is easy in live settings, but difficult when working remotely.
Innovation from Random Encounters. While eureka moments might be rare in the work environment research has shown that decision-making is better when siloed thinking is avoided.
According to senior principal researcher at Microsoft, Dr. Nancy Baym, “When you lose connections, you stop innovating. It’s harder for new ideas to get in and groupthink becomes a serious possibility.”
It will be important for organizations with virtual or hybrid workplaces to consciously find other mechanisms where ideas can be exchanged in an unstructured setting.
Editor's Note: This piece is in collaboration with our corporate sustaining partner, FM:Systems. Michael Schley is an IFMA Fellow and founder of FM:Systems, a workplace technology company.