Texarkana Gazette

Pandemic experience will reshape office life for sure

- By Kelvin Chan

LONDON — Office jobs are never going to be the same.

When workers around the world eventually return to their desks, they’ll find many changes due to the pandemic. For a start, fewer people will go back to their offices as the coronaviru­s crisis makes working from home more accepted, health concerns linger and companies weigh up rent savings and productivi­ty benefits.

For the rest, changes will begin with the commute as workers arrive in staggered shifts to avoid rush hour crowds. Staff might take turns working alternate days in the office to reduce crowding. Floor markings or digital sensors could remind people to stand apart and cubicles might even make a comeback.

“This is going to be a catalyst for things that people were too scared to do before,” said John Furneaux, CEO of Hive, a New York City-based workplace software startup. The pandemic “gives added impetus to allow us and others to make changes to century-old working practices.”

Hive plans to help employees avoid packed rush hour subway commutes by starting at different hours, said Furneaux, who tested positive for COVID-19 antibodies. In Britain, the government is considerin­g asking employers to do the same.

At bigger companies, senior executives are rethinking cramming downtown office towers with workers. British bank Barclays is making a “long-term adjustment in how we think about our location strategy,” CEO Jes Staley said. “The notion of putting 7,000 people in a building may be a thing of the past.”

That is already happening in China, where lockdowns started easing in March. Beijing municipal authoritie­s limited the number of people in each office to no more than 50% of usual staffing levels, required office workers to wear face masks and sit at least 1 meter (3.3 feet) apart.

At a minimum, the COVID-19 crisis could be the death knell for some recent polarizing office trends, such as the shared workspaces used by many tech startups to create a more casual and creative environmen­t. Cubicles and partitions are making a return as the virus speeds the move away from open plan office spaces, architects say.

Design firm Bergmeyer is reinstalli­ng dividers on 85 desks at its Boston office that had been removed over the years. That “will return a greater degree of privacy to the individual desks, in addition to the physical barrier which this health crisis now warrants,” said Vice President Rachel Zsembery.

There’s no rush to return. At Google and Facebook, employees will be able to work remotely until the end of the year. Other firms have realized they don’t even need an office.

Executives at San Francisco teamwork startup Range had given notice on their office because they wanted someplace bigger. But when California’s shelter in place order was issued, they instead scrapped their search and decided to go all remote indefinite­ly, a move that would save six figures on rent.

“We were looking at the writing on the wall,” said co-founder Jennifer Dennard.

One upside of having an allremote workforce is that the company can hire from a broader pool of candidates beyond San Francisco, where astronomic­al housing costs have priced out many. But Dennard said the downside is that it eliminates the “chaotic interrupti­ons” - the chance encounters between staff members that can spark creativity, so the company is planning more online collaborat­ion.

Good Brothers Digital, a public relations firm in Wales, also ditched its office space in downtown Cardiff. Director Martyn John said productivi­ty is just as high as it was before the pandemic forced them to work from home, so he decided to give up the company’s office space to save on rent, one of his biggest expenses.

Why drag employees into the office if they’re happier working from home, he reasons.

“People are just going to expect it now.”

Many changes are expected to remain in place even after the COVID-19 threat ends, as companies prepare for new disease outbreaks or other emergencie­s.

The work from home trend will only continue to accelerate, according to consultanc­y Gartner.

After the pandemic, 41% of employees expect to work remotely at least some of the time, up from 30% before the outbreak, according to 220 human resources executives it surveyed. Workers who do return will likely welcome wearing office attire once again as a signal things are going back to normal, Gartner said.

Not all companies can go fully remote, especially big corporatio­ns with thousands of staff.

At Dell, more people are going to work from home but “we’re still going to need offices,” because some jobs are best done there, said Chief Digital Officer Jen Felch, citing customer support staff, who can access more resources at the office to diagnose equipment problems.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ This May 7 photo shows interior designer Stephanie Jones at the design firm Bergmeyer putting up a safe distancing reminder at the firm’s office in Boston. When workers around the world eventually return to their desks, they’ll find myriad adjustment­s by their companies to reflect the post-pandemic “new normal” way of life, executives and experts predict.
Associated Press ■ This May 7 photo shows interior designer Stephanie Jones at the design firm Bergmeyer putting up a safe distancing reminder at the firm’s office in Boston. When workers around the world eventually return to their desks, they’ll find myriad adjustment­s by their companies to reflect the post-pandemic “new normal” way of life, executives and experts predict.

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