5% of Employees Want the Full-Time Office Back. How Are Managers Handling That?
Christophe Garnier
CEO & Co-Founder at Upflex - Impact Entrepreneur - Making hybrid work the new standard for everyone while reducing employer's carbon emissions
Most employees want remote or hybrid work arrangements. They say it's a dramatic boost to their mental and physical wellbeing, not to mention their job satisfaction and productivity. But a handful of professionals still prefer the office. Here's how we're seeing leaders leverage Upflex to make sure everyone has access to the workplace experience that suits them best.
FlexJobs recently released their Work Insights Survey, exploring workers' attitudes about remote and hybrid work. From May 3, 2023, to May 21, 2023, the company surveyed over 5,600 working professionals in a study on the impacts of recent workforce changes on physical and mental health.?Here are some of the big takeaways from that survey — and how leaders are navigating (and budgeting for) the fact that not all their team members want to work the same way, in the same place.
Everyone works differently
Different people like different ways of working. Sometimes this is a matter of team dynamics, workplace culture, or just individual needs and preferences.
For example, we know remote work can be an equalizer for economically disadvantaged team members, a financial and mental wellness benefit for parents and caregivers in the workplace, and even a safety accommodation for some team members. In an October 2022 report by McKinsey, 9 out of 10 women surveyed reported wanting to work primarily remotely, with many saying they experience fewer micro-aggressions and feel psychologically safer at home than in an office. This was especially true for minorities and under-represented groups, including women of color, LGBTQ women, and women with disabilities.
This recent FlexJobs survey found that more women (58%) than men (42%) want fully remote workspace policies, according to the survey.
While different people have different needs and preferences, here's the great unifier: Workers want flexibility. In fact, I can tell you that 100% of employees like having the flexibility to work where and how they want — even if they choose the traditional office, five days a week, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
And according to this survey, the 5,600 workers polled split into three gropus:
The individual benefits of flexible work
When and where people do their jobs is inextricable from their overall well-being, their mental health, their job satisfaction, and their productivity levels.
According to the recent survey, 96% of respondents said a remote or hybrid workplace would best support their mental health. In terms of mental health, survey respondents said workplace flexibility allowed them
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But it helped their physical wellness, too, allowing them to
The survey also found that 87% of respondents said commuting impacts their stress levels to some degree, with 29% noting that commuting causes them "enormous" stress and another 29% saying it's a major mental health factor, impacting stress "a lot." By this measure, commuting alone could be a key reason why so many people prefer workplace flexibility.
Employee satisfaction for all
The survey found that 8% of respondents wanted the option to work remotely on occasion, while being mostly in-office, while 4% want to be in the office every day. An additional 17% like the idea of a hybrid policy that involves spending two to three days per week in the office. That's almost one in three employees who relies on the office for their mental well being — no small amount.
And recall, 5% of survey respondents said they want to work in an office full-time. One in every 20 team members. Considering the cost of candidate recruitment and acquisition, and the affect that low job satisfaction has on the bigger picture, this isn't something good managers are going to overlook.
But many companies are finding that a long-term lease and the overhead costs associated with a traditional office space aren't sustainable when so many desks are going empty day to day.
Leveraging Upflex's global flex space network, HR and real estate leaders have the ability to customize workspace access by geography, by team, and even by individual employee, so everyone can work where and how they like best. Then, they get data and insights to see what's working — and what's not.
We're seeing clients do this to make sure that the employees who do want to work from an office, with other team members, every day, have the ability to do so — without the spend on a massive, fully equipped leased space that has dozens (or more) desks sit empty every day.
With Upflex's "On Demand" solution, companies can stop paying for desks they don't use, putting together a workspace strategy based on the perfect balance of company needs and employee preferences, and tracking uptake in a data-rich analytics dashboard to monitor remote versus in-office work down to the team or individual, along with desk utilization, spend, third-party flex space bookings according to factors like geography, and overall success, so they can iterate, budget, and plan for the future.
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1 年Achieving a hybrid work strategy that makes everyone happy certainly isn't easy, but it's possible! Having a good understanding of your team's preferences and what works best for your business is key. Good managers should be open to feedback from their team and be willing to explore different strategies to find what works best. #HR and #realestate leaders have an important role to play in this process by staying up to date on the latest research and trends. With the right approach, you can find a hybrid work strategy that works for everyone.