Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Just 2 in 10 employees have a work bestie

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK » Crystal Powers began a new job remotely in February 2022 as a medical records supervisor. She has yet to meet two of the five people who report to her in person and has found it challengin­g to bond with her fellow managers online.

“I was used to that face-to-face of going into people’s cubicles and talking with them one-on-one. It just doesn’t translate as well to a remote environmen­t,” said the 42-year-old Powers, who lives in Madison, Wisconsin.

Just 2 in 10 adult U.S. employees say they definitely have a “best friend” at work, according to a quarterly Gallup survey done in June 2022.

The percentage under age 35 dropped by 3 points when compared to pre-pandemic 2019, to 21% from 24%, said Gallup workplace and well-being researcher Jim Harter. There was no such change for workers 35 and up, he said.

Having a best friend at work has become even more important since the dramatic rise in remote and hybrid employment, Harter said.

“We’re seeing in the data that younger people in general are feeling more disconnect­ed from their workplaces,” he said. “You can attribute some of that potentiall­y to remote work. If they’re less connected to their workplace, they have fewer opportunit­ies to connect with other colleagues and to develop those kinds of friendship­s that they might have had in the past.”

For many employees during the pandemic, particular­ly parents, educators and frontline workers, such friendship­s offered social and emotional support at a critical time, Gallup said.

They also benefited employers. Gallup found a strong link between workers with best friends on the job and profitabil­ity, safety, inventory control and retention.

Employees who have a bestie at work are significan­tly more likely to engage customers and internal partners, get more done in less time, support a safe workplace with fewer accidents, and innovate and share ideas, according to the research.

Karen Piatt started a new job with a medical relief nonprofit just a few weeks

into the pandemic lockdowns of 2020. She did all of her interviewi­ng for the post online and works remotely full time.

“It’s the first time in my 25-year career that I was hired for a job without meeting the hiring manager in person,” said the 52-year-old Piatt, who lives just outside Seattle. “It was nearly two years until I met my colleagues face-to-face.”

When she finally did, at a retreat last year, “it was really special,” she said.

“We hugged and talked as if we had known each other for years. In fact, we had.”

Better for well-being

Best friends on the job are just one piece of the puzzle when it comes to workers’ well-being and added value to employers, Harter said.

Without strong positive feelings for an employer, “You can have friendship­s at work that are likely to be dysfunctio­nal and probably turn into gripe sessions.”

Powers said her team is mostly nearing retirement age. One is younger than she is. She is the only manager hired since the pandemic who is handling a full-time remote staff. Team building has been challengin­g.

“They’re not super-interested in doing icebreaker-type stuff or things like trivia get-togethers,” she said.

Most of her staff live about 45 minutes away from the office and were commuting in before the pandemic. Powers knows her team has casual, digital get-togethers without her. She does biweekly check-ins with each.

 ?? CATALINA MARÍA GOMEZ CAYCEDO VIA AP ?? These workers at a software company met and have become friends. People with besties at work add value to the company and to the lives of those workers, experts say.
CATALINA MARÍA GOMEZ CAYCEDO VIA AP These workers at a software company met and have become friends. People with besties at work add value to the company and to the lives of those workers, experts say.

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