"Is the new hybrid plan working?
That's what a lot of companies are asking, as they step back and review their progress toward a new hybrid workplace. More and more businesses have at least a portion of employees who spend some of their time working in the office and some time working remotely.
How can you figure out if your hybrid approach is a winner? Well, you know you aren't there yet if you've got a policy that says people should be in the office three days a week but most desks remain empty.
But even if your employees are returning to the office as required, you can't assume that everything is going great. You need to tune into other, less-obvious -- but just as crucial -- signs that not all is happy in your house of hybrid.
Here are six warning signs leaders should look out for:
1. Managers are out of sync with their teams.
If managers are spending a lot more time in the office than their teams are -- or a lot less -- you have a problem.
For one thing, if your boss spends most of the time in the office, even though the official line is that you're welcome to spend two days a week at home . . . well, it's hard not to feel uneasy about working remotely. This situation is a recipe for employees commuting full time, and feeling resentful about it, or conversely, looking for a new job, with a boss who truly embraces hybrid work.
But it can be even worse if the boss is in the office less than the rest of the team. When you have to be in the office four days a week, but the boss is only there for two, it feels unfair -- even when that discrepancy is directly related to the nature of your work and responsibilities.
2. Video calls persist for on-site employees.
If your hybrid approach isn't reducing the volume of video calls, it is a sign that you're failing to make the most of your staff's in-office, face-to-face time, or that you are making people come into the office for no reason. After all, why make people trudge to the office if they are just going to spend yet another day on video calls?
3. Work hours are expanding.
Maybe some executives still see 12-hour workdays as a badge of honor, but for a lot of employees, that just leads to burnout and resentment. And that's one risk of a hybrid schedule, since days crammed full of video calls and meetings often push other work (like email, planning and report writing) into the wee hours.
4. It's all business.
When on-site days are so packed that there's no time for social chitchat, or if the volume of online communications is so overwhelming that there's no room to waste on a little personal news, it's a sign that you haven't left any space for bonding. That doesn't mean you need to send your team off to a ropes course or add a GIF to every email. Instead, use the kind of strategies that help global teams connect across geographic and cultural distance: Leave the first or last minutes of every meeting for informal conversation; call remote colleagues on their birthdays; set up an always-on webcam in the break room so that off-site workers can drop in for a spontaneous visit with their on-site colleagues.
5. People miss the pandemic.
"Remember when we were all working remotely?" is a question that should ring an instant alarm. When you hear your employees waxing nostalgic for the days of full-time remote work, you know the return to the office has been less than a clear win.
No, you don't need to return to pandemic-era working conditions. But pandemic nostalgia is a sign that employees aren't seeing those benefits -- at least, not at a level that offsets what they miss about full-time remote work.
6. Your late adopters relapse.
One positive effect of Covid? Even the most steadfast late adopters -- the people who refused to use Google Docs, Slack, Microsoft Teams or really anything other than email -- finally had to learn to use online collaboration tools.
Now that they are back in the office, at least part of the time, are they relapsing? Have they significantly reduced their use of digital collaboration tools? In that case, it is a sign that you haven't found a sustainable, effective approach to distributed and hybrid teams. If part of your team has reverted to the physical exchange of paper, or at best whiteboards in the office, the hybrid team isn't going to be as productive as you'd like.
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Dr. Samuel is a technology researcher and co-author of "Remote, Inc.: How to Thrive at Work . . . Wherever You Are." Dr. Griffith is the Keith Beedie chair of innovation and entrepreneurship at Simon Fraser University, and is the author of "The Plugged-In Manager: Get in Tune With Your People, Technology, and Organization to Thrive." Email them at reports@wsj.com." [1]
1. Year in Review (A Special Report): The New Workplace --- Hybrid Warning Signs: How to tell if your hybrid workplace plan needs changes. No. 1: Managers and their teams are out of sync.
Samuel, Alexandra; Griffith, Terri. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 15 Dec 2022: R.17.
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