2022-07-25 17:13:18

CIOs Need to Embrace Radical Flexibility to Drive the Post-COVID-19

The post-COVID-19 work environment demands radical flexibility in work policies, changing work patterns and how the office supports different working requirements. CIOs can lead workers and support the enterprise by implementing flexible work models that meet evolving employer and employee needs.

 

Overview

Key Findings

  • Leaders are accustomed to the corporate office or facility as the primary or only work location, and are unsure how to plan for different combinations of workplace options or what patterns to expect.
  • Legacy remote work policies are designed to address working outside the office as a limited exception, not as a normal option available on the scale anticipated for the post-COVID-19 workplace.
  • Offices and facilities are traditionally designed for individuals to work in isolation or sit in a conference room, with limited or minimal design or planning for shared or collaborative work experiences that are a higher priority in a flexible work environment.

Recommendations

To create a post-COVID-19 work environment that supports radical flexibility for the evolving IT workforce, CIOs should:

  • Embrace flexible work patterns by surveying managers and workers about workplace expectations, preferences, requirements and limitations to determine work location preferences and to anticipate the proportion of the workforce in each pattern.
  • Communicate new work expectations by retiring any legacy remote work policy and replacing it with a new flexible work policy designed around the expectation that working from home or multiple locations is an accepted option.
  • Determine the functional purpose of space by working with IT managers, HR, finance and facilities to replace space dedicated to workstations with new collaboration, innovation and development areas that meet team performance, reflection, refreshment, social and interaction needs.

Introduction

The global shift from working in an office to working at home shattered long-held beliefs about the relationships between work environment, productivity and responsibility. Leaders across industries and sectors recognized that individual workers are responsible and productive independent of their work location. In the 2020 Gartner ReimagineHR Client Survey, 90% of HR leaders indicated that they now completely trust employees to work from home, and 75% believe employees are as productive working from home as in the office. For knowledge workers, in particular, the bond between work performance and employer location has been broken and replaced with recognition of personal trust and responsibility. Workers themselves have embraced this change, with 80% of respondents to the 2020 Gartner ReimagineHR Employee Survey expecting to continue to work away from the employer’s location as needed.1 For most organizations, the expectation that work required commuting into an office and sitting at a desk to use technologies to do your job is no longer relevant or acceptable.

CIOs must now consider and plan for the purpose and structure of the emerging work environment for the IT organization and workforce. The shift away from the office as the central work location has implications on workplace and workforce planning. Organizations need to focus on developing new management and leadership skills suited to supporting high-performing teams. HR must consider the impact on workforce planning as a flexible work policy becomes a competitive differentiator for talent acquisition. Workers have a wider selection of work patterns available to them, which introduces more complex scheduling, communication and workflow needs. Addressing these challenges begins with CIOs and enterprise leaders developing policies to guide decision making in the new environment and planning for a safe, sustainable and healthy workplace design, focused on employee well-being, experience and collaboration.

Analysis

Embrace Flexible Work Patterns

Global research data collected throughout 2020 from employees, employers and HR leaders indicates firm expectations about the post-COVID-19 work experience that do not include returning to the pre-COVID-19 work environment. Employee surveys show a clear preference and expectation to have flexibility in selecting their primary work location and in arranging their schedule. Employees feel strongly about having this flexibility, with half the survey respondents indicating they would leave their current employer if they are not offered a work-from-home option. Moving to a flexible work environment, however, introduces new variations of work patterns that were not part of most workplaces in the pre-COVID-19 experience. Understanding the emerging work patterns is essential for workforce policy and space utilization planning.

Gartner ReimagineHR Employee Survey results indicate that 80% of workers expect to continue to work from home at least three days per week. Findings from Owl Labs and Global Workplace Analytics surveys show similar responses. This significant percentage highlights the reality of the post-COVID-19 work experience that will be focused on a hybrid work arrangement between home and employer offices. The majority of the workforce expect to work from a home office two or three days per week, with the option to attend the employer office the other days. Although this hybrid combination is emerging as the dominant pattern for the majority of workers, it only accounts for 50% to 60% of the workforce.

In the 2020 Gartner Employee Engagement Survey, work location preferences are more clearly visible. Only 13% of respondents indicate that they don’t want to work remotely and prefer to return to the employer location. In comparison, 25% of respondents indicate a preference to work from home every day. The majority of responses, 51%, reflect the preference for options to work-from-home office and employer office on a weekly schedule, with 11% wanting that same option monthly or occasionally. As a result, data indicates that organizations should be expecting between 10% and 15% of the workforce to choose the employer office as their primary workplace. There will be another portion of the workforce, between 25% and 30%, expecting to work from their home office as their primary workplace, with the majority, between 50% and 60%, wanting options for work location and schedule.

Taken together, research data indicates that leaders should be anticipating at least three distinct primary work patterns as part of the new flexible work model: hybrid, employer office and home office. In discussion with enterprise leaders, Gartner is seeing a fourth pattern — borderless — taking shape in some organizations, with its own unique characteristics.

 

These work pattern percentages are projected and estimated, based on combined global data across industries and sectors. Each organization must assess the expectations of its workforce to determine the unique allocation for each of these patterns, and plan workflows and space utilization accordingly.

 

The borderless pattern represents truly remote workers (employees, freelancers, contractors or gig workers) who are not in the same locality, region or perhaps country, and who work on a different schedule and arrangement. Currently, these workers are captured in the hybrid and home office data. Organizations moving into a flexible work environment should expect this pattern to emerge and be relatively small at first — perhaps less than 5% — with the potential to increase over time, as organizations become more comfortable with the flexible work environment.

 

Leaders in every organization must take the shifting expectations of the workforce into consideration in the planning for a post-COVID-19 work experience. Few, if any, organizations will be exclusively one of these patterns. Most organizations will have at least the first three, with some already involved in the borderless pattern. Policy and planning should anticipate that workers can move between these patterns as professional responsibilities and personal circumstances change over time. The flexible work policy and the corporate space utilization design must accommodate these patterns and allow for variations and adjustments, based on employer and employee needs.

 

CIO actions:

  • Set a leadership example for the IT organization and model good planning practices by working with other senior leaders to understand workforce expectations and attitudes.
  • Collaborate with HR to develop surveys and feedback opportunities to collect data from employees, managers and executives to inform the flexible work strategy and planning.
  • Use that information to determine the proportion of the workforce falling into each of the four patterns, so you can develop a set of flexible work policy guidelines and design space that is functional and purposeful.

ommunicate New Workplace Expectations

Globally, HR leaders report that remote work increased from 29% pre-COVID-19 to 76% by April 2020. According to current survey responses, on average, clients expect that 57% of their workforces could work entirely remotely, and 63% could work remotely at least sometimes. Enterprise leaders must plan for the home office to be the primary workspace for more than half of the workforce in the post-COVID-19 work environment. This dramatic shift in work location means that working from home can no longer be considered an exception to the normal workplace. Working from home, either every day of the week or a few days per week, will be considered normal in the post-COVID-19 flexible workplace.

Most existing remote work policies were developed based on the premise that working from home was an exception that required special criteria, justifications and approvals. In most instances, the legacy policies were focused on only one pattern: the full-time telework or remote worker. Legacy policies are not effective for guiding decisions and conducting workforce planning where work location and schedule flexibility are the norm. Retiring the legacy remote work policy and replacing it with a new flexible work policy sends a clear signal across the enterprise, to management and workers, that the work environment is changing to accommodate new patterns and expectations.

 

For a flexible work policy to be effective, leadership modeling is essential. Leaders embracing the new work patterns for themselves is key to the policy leading to behavior and culture change. If leaders and managers continue to work exclusively from the employer office in a traditional way, direct reports and teams will not feel comfortable or safe doing otherwise.This will undermine the value of flexible work to the organization, and likely lead to disengagement, presenteeism and unwanted turnover of critical technical talent.

The purpose of a flexible work policy goes beyond simply sending a signal. Policies are needed to guide and direct decisions and planning, and to ensure consistency across functional areas. This is particularly important in organizations that have not put any type of enterprise policy in place.

 

CIO actions:

  • Discuss radical flexibility with HR and enterprise leaders, and how to apply this approach to benefit the workforce and to support management decisions.
  • Work with HR and the IT management team to distinguish this from any legacy practices and thinking by defining new terminology and definitions for flexible work.
  • Avoid surprises by consulting with finance, HR, facilities and legal to identify any regulatory or contract obligations that need to be considered before planning and implementing a flexible work policy.

 

Determine Functional Purpose of Space

The traditional enterprise office place was designed to function for a single, dominant work pattern: employees commuting into the location, sitting at a workstation, doing their assigned tasks within a set schedule and commuting home. Everyone worked the same pattern, making the design of the office focused on providing for a dedicated, assigned workspace. The addition of conference or meeting rooms defined the two expectations of employees: sitting at a desk or sitting in a meeting. Amenity places such as lunch rooms and other work and social function areas, when available, were viewed as secondary spaces but not necessities. In the post-COVID-19 workplace, the employer location requires a significant redesign to accommodate new work patterns.

 

Adopting radical flexibility acknowledges the changing expectations of the workforce about the nature of work and the purpose of the employer’s location. The legacy office was focused and designed primarily for two purposes: solo desk work or group meetings. In a flexible workplace, both of these functions are accommodated from a home office or through collaboration tools. To remain relevant, the employer location must now focus on identifying and providing the alternative, special-purpose employee experiences that cannot be addressed in a home office or by virtual communication tools. These specialized spaces to support engagement and performance will provide a competitive advantage for the enterprise.

 

One of the significant shifts in work experience expectations reflects functional change. In the traditional office environment, a worker would typically request or decide to work from home when they needed to escape office conversations, distractions and interruptions, so they could do focused work. In a flexible work model, the majority of the workforce is engaged in focused work in their home office on a daily basis. Workers now look to the employer location to provide opportunities for those unique collaboration, innovation or social experiences that are not available in a home office arrangement.

The post-COVID-19 office design should not be focused on replicating a workstation environment of the past, but instead designed to deliver a range of alternative work experiences. Some examples of creative use of space would be adding the potential use of “green spaces” as a restorative antidote to the cabin fever/social isolation of a home office. With business travel significantly reduced or eliminated, workers report that they miss the reflection and thinking time that travel provided. Consider creating retreat spaces similar to travel lounges to recreate that environment and experience.

The work patterns described earlier combined with surveys and consultation with the workforce can help identify the new enterprise space functions. As a starting point, most organizations will need to think about three distinct types of functional space:

1.     Dedicated workspace and workstations — These will be required for workers whose primary work location is in the employer office. This will be a greatly reduced space requirement compared to the traditional office layout.

2.     Assigned workspace and workstations — These will be required for drop-in workers coming into the employer location occasionally. This space would have limited capacity, to accommodate a smaller number of workers on a rotation basis.

3.     Specific function space — Designed to address specialized activity needs for individuals and teams, such as collaboration, social interactions, training and development, innovation labs, client showcase, marketing and sales, and others, these spaces will be used by segments of the workforce at different times, no matter where the primary work location.

 

CIO actions:

  • Apply radical flexibility to the design of the work environment to focus on the reasons that employees will want to leave their home office to come into the employer location.
  • Work with IT managers and teams to identify the types of interactions, meetings or experiences that cannot be addressed virtually or within a home office.
  • Consult with facilities to configure a variety of special purpose areas designed to deliver the employee experiences that will keep IT teams engaged, productive and high performing.

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