Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Employers experiment with return to in-person work

- LUCY MEAKIN

Fourteen months after coronaviru­s confined the world’s office workers to their homes, companies are embarking on another great experiment — how to get their teams back together inperson, at least some of the time.

It’s a task that is briefly uniting the titans of global finance and leaders of nimble start- ups, all of whom are having to plan for staff coming in two or three days each week, at least for now. Driven in some places by covid-19 concerns and in others by a desire to embrace workplace change, hybrid work is the new center ground — at least in the short term.

With work- from- home mandates easing soon in many places, however, experts are concerned the future mix of home and office work will be complicate­d to manage and won’t provide the flexibilit­y employees have become accustomed to during the pandemic. The U.K. is expected to ease restrictio­ns on June 21 and New York’s mayor wants the city “fully reopened” by July 1.

“Remote home-working is about flexibilit­y in location, not necessaril­y about flexibilit­y in hours,” said Claire McCartney, senior resourcing and inclusion adviser at the CIPD, the U.K.’s profession­al body for human resources and people developmen­t.

Flexible arrangemen­ts — ranging from job-sharing to staggered start and finish times or compressed working hours — are used frequently by a range of employees, notably parents and caretakers, and in particular, working women.

A CIPD analysis of U.K. labor force data suggests that 9.3% of British workers — equivalent to 3 million people — would be willing to work fewer hours in exchange for a cut in pay and in a report published last month, the organizati­on found unmet employee demand across a range of flexible working options.

Yet, the CIPD also found that while 63% of employers expect to implement hybrid work policies in 2021, 48% plan to expand “flexitime,” the single most popular flexible-work option.

“A lack of true flexibilit­y is a really valid concern,” said Margarete McGrath, London-based global head of strategic propositio­ns at Dell

Technologi­es Inc. McGrath’s teams work to help clients adapt to a changing business environmen­t while putting in place technology to help them retain and attract staff in the long-run.

For now, many employers are sanguine about the prospect of asking staff to come back to office two or three days a week. The divide is over what executives expect their teams to do when they cross the threshold and how much permanent change bosses will encourage.

“It could be absolutely chaotic. That’s our fear, that actually they haven’t pulled together a hybrid working strategy,” McGrath said. “There are lots of organizati­ons that are lagging behind, saying ‘We’re not going to change anything. We’re just going to get our staff back in.’ They’re not fully grasping the extent of this paradigm shift around work.”

Data from workplace experience specialist­s Leesman show that employees feel more productive at home doing many key elements of their jobs. Separately, research carried out at Stanford University demonstrat­ed that home-working works, in moderation.

Not all companies are ready to embrace the findings, said Peggie Rothe, Leeman’s chief insights and research officer. She sees a division into three broad buckets: companies that are already taking action and redesignin­g working practices; some that intend to but haven’t started the process yet; and those that simply have not started thinking about it yet.

A recent King’s College London/Bristol University study found that while 97% of companies are planning for hybrid working of some kind, just 36% plan to redesign job roles.

“The worst thing an organizati­on can do now is close your eyes, cover your ears and imagine you can try to go back to how it was before, because if you do that you’re going to go backwards,” Rothe said.

That’s a concern driving change at Aviva, the insurance company that was an early U.K. evangelist of hybrid work. Managers there are now being supplied with five profiles to help define where and how their team members are best suited to working and what facilities they will need.

Concerns remain, though, that a focus on role- based guidelines for the new era of work will allow employers to trumpet hybrid working policies while paying lip service to wider issues of flexibilit­y.

Such arrangemen­ts help businesses attract and retain employees, as well as supporting inclusion and diversity and boosting customer service, said Claire McCartney of the CIPD.

“Organizati­ons will ignore this at their peril, because expectatio­ns have changed,” she said.

At Aviva, the onset of the hybrid era will bring a formal end to some of the blurring of family and home life that employers have tolerated during the pandemic. For example, wherever employees are working they will be expected to ensure they have adequate child care in place to allow them to work uninterrup­ted.

Emily Clark, a senior employment lawyer at internatio­nal law firm Bird & Bird LLP in London, believes companies will need to think through potential side-effects of imposing a top- down, one-size-fits-all employment policy.

“The risk is that people’s working patterns are usually set out in their employment contracts to some extent,” Clark said. “It does get quite complex. I can envisage situations where organizati­ons have something in mind that might not be the normal pattern of working in the office every day and people turn around and say ‘ You can’t change that without my consent.’”

Dell’s Margarete McGrath notes that companies need to ensure business goals are met, premises are covid-secure and staff are treated fairly.

“It’s important that we get that mix right. There will be teething issues no doubt, because we’re still very much in the experiment­ation phase,” McGrath said.

By the time schools and universiti­es open their doors in September, life on Wall Street will have resumed, and employers in the U.S. and U.K. will likely have more robust plans. Leaders and staff alike may well find they need to be patient and strap in for a bumpy road ahead, according to McGrath.

“This is the first time where nobody is bragging that they’ve got this totally pinned down. We’re going through another phase that is even murkier,” she said.

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