Offices get virus safety makeover
Businesses grappling with major cultural shift for office workers after pandemic.
When employees at Salesforce, the cloud software giant based in San Francisco, eventually return to their office towers, they may find that the fun is gone from their famously fun-loving workplaces.
No more chatting in the elevator. No hugging. No more communal snack jars.
Before employees can even go into the office, they will be required to fill out online health surveys and take their temperature. If they pass the health screening and have a good reason to go in, Salesforce will schedule their shifts — and send them digital entry tickets for the lobby with an arrival time.
In the lobby, employees will be asked to wait for the elevator on social distancing floor markers and stand on other markers once inside the elevator.
These new command-and-control work practices are intended to help protect Salesforce’s more than 50,000 employees as the company undertakes a colossal task: figuring out how to safely reopen its more than 160 offices around the world.
“It’s going to be different,” Salesforce’s chief executive, Marc Benioff, said. “It’ll be more sterile. It’ll be more hospital-like.
Salesforce’s vision of a more micromanaged workplace is indicative of the complexities that many businesses are grappling with during the pandemic and signals a significant cultural shift for office workers across the United States.
With their airy workspaces, fishbowl glass conference rooms and hangout zones, tech giants like Salesforce helped reshape the American office from packed rows of partitioned cubicles into open, shared spaces. The homey, amenity-filled settings encouraged collaboration and community — while reducing employees’ eagerness to leave for home.
After closing its premises in mid-March, the company drafted a detailed 21-page handbook to reopen its offices. In recent company surveys, the majority of employees said they wanted to return to the office. Others who wish to continue working from home may do so until at least the end of this year.
“We realized that because the safety, the health, the wellness of everyone is our top priority, we were going have to manage this like we’ve never managed anything before,” said Elizabeth Pinkham, Salesforce’s executive vice president for global real estate.
Salesforce is trying out its pandemic management playbook at a handful of smaller locations that reopened in late May — in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Seoul, South Korea — the first of its offices to reopen globally. Benioff said the company would apply any lessons it learned from the offices in Asia to subsequent locations that are preparing to reopen.
Company executives weighed factors like government guidance and declining virus cases in each region to determine when to reopen. For each building, they also redesigned floor plans to enable social distancing and instituted other safety measures.
Essentially, Salesforce is approaching the pandemic as if it were a software engineering problem. It has deconstructed the complex process of reopening into individual measures that, taken together, are expected to make the workplace safer and reduce the risks of coronavirus outbreaks.
Will the engineering approach work?
“We’re going to do it in a smart way. We’re going to be careful,” Benioff said, emphasizing that the pandemic was uncharted territory. “I can’t pretend to you I have all the answers. Let’s get real here.”
The task of overseeing the workplace redesign at Salesforce and nudging employee behavioral changes to go with it falls in part to Pinkham, who oversees the company’s global real estate.
For the last few years, she has worked to create a consistent, homelike atmosphere at Salesforce offices around the world. As a result, many now resembles the headquarters in Salesforce Tower, the tallest building in San Francisco, where about 5,000 employees work.
Now, rather than try to make all the offices seem equally warm and convivial, Pinkham must make each one more antiseptic.
She is redesigning the floor plans for each location, in consultation with experts, to meet public health recommendations for social distancing. The company is removing workstations, for instance, to reduce office capacity.
Desks that remain will be spaced apart, with glass or plexiglass partitions between them. Team meeting rooms that once held 14 will be severely limited.
Salesforce will also use scheduling software to limit the number of people working at each office. It will not be an entirely automated process.The biggest workplace change may be cultural. Until there is a coronavirus vaccine, or at least better medical treatments, Salesforce employees will find their formerly funloving office life more managed by rules and tech tools.