Houston Chronicle Sunday

Keeping things civil in the remote workplace

- By Nellie Bowles

Gustavo Razzetti, who gets hired by companies to improve their work cultures, has noticed a change since the pandemic began last year: more political brawls, more managers losing control of their employees, a curious mix of hyper-engagement and lack of empathy.

“Employees are turning their cameras off, hiding behind avatars, becoming disrespect­ful,” said Razzetti, whose consultanc­y is called Fearless Culture. “They’re being aggressive among each other.”

Office conversati­on at some companies is starting to look as unruly as conversati­on on the internet. That’s because office conversati­on now is internet conversati­on. Many companies have been working online for nearly a year, with plans to continue well into 2021. And just as people are bolder behind keyboards on Twitter, they are bolder behind keyboards on workplace messaging platforms like Microsoft Teams and Slack — with all the good and all the bad, but with a lot more legal liability.

Work culture experts say there are steps companies can take before the lawyers get involved. These are among them: closely monitoring large chat groups, listening to complaints, reminding employees they are on the job and not bantering with friends, and being aware that a move to a virtual workforce can expose new issues like age discrimina­tion.

At a lot of U.S. companies, this is the first time colleagues have had to come to terms with working and socializin­g almost entirely online. There is likely no going back: Nearly half of the U.S. labor force is working from home full time, according to Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom. And 67 percent of companies expect working from home to be permanent or long-lasting, according to a study by S&P Global, which provides financial analysis.

“At the beginning of the pandemic, everyone patted themselves on their back, like, ‘Oh, look, productivi­ty has not fallen. We’ve transition­ed to digital. We’ve done things we were seeking to do: streamline processes, move things online, decentrali­ze decision-making.’ But they were forgetting about culture,” said Jennifer Howard-Grenville, a professor in organizati­on studies at the University of Cambridge. “Now the reality of that has hit.”

When message boards, chat rooms and Facebook become work tools, offcolor humor is more common. Aggressive political discussion­s that would be out of place among cubicles now seem fine. The hierarchy of physical space disappears when everyone is a username. Confrontin­g senior management does not require a walk and a knock on the door, and confrontin­g colleagues does not require sitting next to them the rest of the day.

“I’ve seen bullying by text in the various kinds of internal instant messenger platforms, and we’ve seen an uptick in those kinds of complaints coming our way,” said John Marshall, an employment and civil rights lawyer in Columbus, Ohio. Harassment from colleagues in internal messaging platforms is not new, he added, but now there is more of it.

These new work tools were designed to look and feel like message boards and social media. Workers notice that and adopt similar behaviors, researcher­s say. The performati­ve nature of Slack, where colleagues fuel discussion­s in vast chat rooms by adding emojis, for example, means frenzies grow and are hard to contain once they start.

Some of the professors and consultant­s recommend simple solutions: taking turns to talk or post in meetings, requiring silent time to read something together during a video meeting before discussing and giving workers 90 seconds to vent about politics before beginning a politics-free workday.

As with anything that involves workplace communicat­ion — particular­ly workplace conversati­on in text form — there are legal liabilitie­s. There is a big legal difference between a troll with an opinion who is an internet stranger and a troll with an opinion who can contribute to your performanc­e review. People could sue if they believe they are being harassed.

Anyone with an eye toward preventing legal liability knows: Text is dangerous. The fact that workplace discussion now happens in online chats is a nightmare for legal teams.

“You need to be sure you’re not writing — documentin­g — anything that’s going to wildly offend people,” said Leslie Caputo, whose title is people scientist at Humu, which makes workplace culture software. “For the millennial­s, the first age to grow up with IM, we’re so used to having our predominan­t interactio­ns this way, it can be hard to remember that this is a workplace with different rules.”

Lawyers are starting to see more complaints. Some of the risk involves how casually people interact on the platforms, which are built to encourage casual interactio­n.

“We’re seeing more lackadaisi­cal conduct in general and treating coworkers like they’re your online friends,” said Danielle Sweets, a personal injury lawyer in Los Angeles.

 ?? Hokyoung Kim / New York Times ?? When companies move all employee communicat­ions online, they often face the same bad behavior problems as the rest of the internet.
Hokyoung Kim / New York Times When companies move all employee communicat­ions online, they often face the same bad behavior problems as the rest of the internet.

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