More office time is the cost of bureaucracy

More office time is the cost of bureaucracy

Over the last few months the drumbeat of stories of CEOs demanding more and more office time has been unrelenting. Just when you thought we were past all this, the news keeps coming.

Earlier this month thousands of employees at SAP signed a letter saying they felt ‘betrayed’ by the firm’s new ‘3 days in’ policy starting in April . The company’s CEO, Christian Klein had previously boasted that SAP was a ‘100 percent flexible and trust-based workplace’.

The BBC reported on the ‘executive hubris’ of bosses of big firms like Boeing, JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Citigroup demanding a five-day office return reflecting that it was a consequence of ‘hard-line management tactics’ triumphing over the idea of empowering employees.

Such has been the torrent of stories that it’s invited me to rethink whether my own reading of the research is wrong. I paused to think and wonder if there was a reason why bigger firms are still feeling that hybrid working is failing their organisations.

The issue of this being relevant only to bigger firms is an important point. Small teams and smaller organisations rarely report issues to me when we have discussions about remote working.

A reminder of what the research says:

  • Research says hybrid working reduces employee attrition & increases job satisfaction (see next article)
  • BCG reports that structured hybrid firms are growing at twice the speed of in office organisations
  • Structured hybrid working (agreed shared days in the office) scores the highest for employee satisfaction in Glassdoor ratings (2023)

When I work with the leadership teams of organisations of 40-60 people they tell me how hybrid working has motivated their teams and aided employee retention. I’ve even worked with small teams inside huge organisations and theyve told me a couple of days in the office proves enough to re-energise and connect with each other and the wider group.

But big firms sigh and tell me they’re struggling with employee engagement, that the culture doesn’t feel the same and that they’re going to demand stricter attendance rules.

So why the difference? It’s worth reminding ourselves of why big is different. You may have seen these maps of connections between team members (sometimes called dependencies).

When a team has three people in it there are three dependencies. A needs to know B and C, C needs to know B - three lines of communication. When a fourth person is added the number of dependencies doubles to 6. A fourth person takes it to 10. With 6 people there are 15 dependencies.

As teams get bigger and bigger the lines of communication rise exponentially.

By the time a team reaches 14 people there are 91 lines of communication . Anyone who has worked in a big organisation will recognise managers telling them they can’t just be good at their job, they also need to be a better communicator. In big firms there’s a lot of people to keep in the loop at any stage - internal PR is a big component of a job.

This has always been the challenge of big firms. Netflix used to proudly articulate the challenge of scale was a trade off with employee autonomy. Here’s a slide from their OG culture deck .

Netflix boast (at the time) was that they empowered their workers to avoid that bureaucracy.

But many big firms are trapped in the loop of feeling like relationships and connections are missing from remote working. There are so many connections to sustain that paradoxically work becomes more impersonal and disconnected. The illusory indulgence of opening the door to the corner office and walking the floor seems to be lack the magic it once had.

As regressive as some of the RTO moves by big firms feel they do reflect a growing concern amongst some monster organisations that colleagues are more detached when working remotely. I chatted to someone this week who told me ‘no one ever answers my pings on Mondays and Fridays’. At SAP CEO Christian Klein justified his decision, ‘I’m not a big believer that on [Microsoft Teams] you can understand our culture, you can get educated, and you can get enabled to do your job best’.

Maybe, just maybe he’s right. For big firms who don’t intentionally design new ways of working then maybe they do need more days in the office. It’s largely an admission that they’ve not planned how they are working, that they’ve not adapted with the times and they’ve found that by trying to work in the way they used to work it fails big bureaucracies.

Sure get everyone back in the office. I’m not sure what it says about these companies capacity to reinvent for bigger challenges in the years ahead. But maybe bureaucracies really do need to be in the office for most of the week.


Hybrid work, happy workers

I saw Nick Bloom, researching professor and Patron Saint of Hybrid Working, talking on a webinar last week . He cited a paper that he’d worked on that studied the impact of hybrid working on employee experience.

Switching to hybrid working had had a big effect on employee attrition (quit rates) reducing them by a third. But it had the opposite effect on managers suggesting that managers found it harder to manage remote workers - the quit rate amongst managers rose by 55%. Managers just didn’t enjoy managing absent workers.

Not only did employee attrition fall but job satisfaction rose substantially including job recommendation, work satisfaction, life satisfaction and work-life balance.


Some compelling details about meeting purges

Microsoft data says that hybrid workers are spending 50% of their week in meetings.

So how could we reduce this time? The experience of Asana and Shopify is worth exploring in detail.

At Asana they were asked to identity meetings that lacked value. They were told to remove standing meetings with fewer than five people for a 2 day experiment

Result: most meetings shrunk in length down to 15 minutes. Some weekly meetings became monthly. There was an average saving of 11 hours a month.

The firm also introduced a 'No Meeting Wednesday'.

They also introduced a simple tool - to measure meetings via two axes: the impact of the meeting (out of 3) and the effort taken with prep and follow-up (again out of 3). Meetings that were a lot of work but had little impact were also eliminated by teams.

Slack also has a no meeting 'Focus Friday' and Maker Weeks when all meetings are cancelled to get projects done. These weeklong hiatuses serve as a provocation: ;This break in regularly scheduled meetings encourages teams to reevaluate their calendars and ask, did we really need that meeting at all?'

Loved this article detailing these changes - have you tried anything similar?

Further listening: the FT Working It podcast had a brilliant episode on these intiatives at Slack


Like this? Get it as an email or get in touch with Bruce to talk to your team

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Professor Uri Gneezy is the world's foremost expert on the science of incentives - and he comes with a huge warning about what such schemes actually achieve.

Eat Sleep Work Repeat is today hosted by Bruce Daisley , Ellen Scott and Matthew Cook .

Listen: Apple / Spotify / website

Since this seems like mainly a problem of communication and coordination in larger organisations, are there ways they can adapt rather than mandate RTO? Like technology for coordinated hybrid work, like desk booking, to get people back in on the right days for fruitful collaboration and connection. In other words, remote seems to be out of the question for these large orgs, so why not implement hybrid the right way in order to maintain culture and employee satisfaction?

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Natalie Spencer

Creative Communicator for brands and employees

8 个月

It's interesting to watch enterprise companies force feed the return to office and then watch morale swirl down the drain when it isn't delivered well to the staff. Oh, boy. It's a turbulent 2024 so far for some.

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Walt Batansky

CFO ???????????? Solving the WHERE? of Data Center, Office, and Industrial Workplace Strategy. ? Performance Guaranteed.

8 个月

Why have firms been so successful at moving their data into the cloud but they can't seem to move their knowledge workers there?

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Durran Eden (FIFST)

Food Scientist / NPD Manager / Liquid Creator of Britvic Mixers & Fruit Shoot / Innovation Manager / Idea Generator / Problem Solver / NPD / Sustainability / Start Up / Packaging / Plant-based / Marketing Savvy

8 个月

In the world of work I occupy I cannot work from home unless I built my own R&D facility. In my world close person to person collaboration is a prerequisite to success The constraints of Covid ran counter to this creating additional costly hurdles. I very much disliked working from home, as it felt like bringing a disease home, an infection. Home is for everything that work is not. I've had roles in the past with crazy commutes, early starts and late finishes thus I appreciate how unproductive it feels to sit in a car, train, tube on the daily commute and how working from home for some is a liberating experience. ??

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Dan Hughes

Digital Leadership and Culture Programme Lead at Jisc

8 个月

This is insightful Bruce, thank you. I think what strikes me as a key challenge in across the two stories is the impact that hybrid working needs to have on working cultures and how this requires training managers to manage differently. I'd be interested to know if you've heard of examples where companies have strongly sought to develop their managers to effectively manage hybrid teams and still concluded that a return to the office is essential. In my experience lots of organisations have essentially left their managers to work it out for themselves and so most have tried to (unsuccessfully) "lift and shift" in-office practices into a hybrid setting which rarely works well.

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