Coercion is still Coercion
Colleen Lewis
Executive & Leadership Coach~Women's Leadership Development Expert~Systemic Team Coach~Organizational Development Consultant
It's obvious that management has little, if any understanding of human behaviour
At a time, when engagement has continually been a problem for companies, how do they expect engagement to go up if they enact coercive tactics?
Bosses aren’t backing down from their RTO demands in 2024
January 4, 2024
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Good morning! If you were hoping for a resounding WFH victory for workers in 2024, you may be out of luck. Executives overwhelmingly say they plan to track their employee’s office attendance this year, offering incentives for the rule followers and punishments for the rebels.?
Eight in 10 companies plan to track employee attendance
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Leaders plan to use both the carrot and the stick to get workers back in their cubicles. Around 95% of companies surveyed say employees will face consequences if they don’t comply with attendance requirements—these include cutting bonuses, changing benefit offerings, and reducing salaries. And one-third of leaders say they will fire employees who don’t go along with office requirements.?
But 91% of leaders also plan to incentivize workers
It’s unlikely, however, that enticements of after-hours cocktails will actually bring workers back, according to Julia Toothacre, Resume Builder’s resume and career strategist. Many workers are hell-bent on leaving the office once their workday ends, and couldn’t even be convinced to attend their annual office holiday parties
“For a lot of people it becomes: ‘If you are not compensating me for staying after my normal work hours, I’m not doing it,’” she says, noting that attitude is a stark contrast from 15 or 20 years ago, when such after-hours events were considered key to networking and advancing one’s career. “Companies who are run by a different generation, in most cases, they think that that’s the thing that people need, and it’s not. They want their time back, they want to be compensated, they need childcare.”
Managers should also be mindful of winning the battle but losing the war when it comes to RTO, she warns. While some workers may leave in protest, others will comply out of fear alone, which hurts office culture overall.?
“I think these companies think that it’s improving morale, when really people just aren’t complaining about it, because they don’t want to get fired,” she says.
Paige McGlauflin [email protected] @paidion