Workplace Flexibility: Are Your Employees Taking It Too Far?
Photography by Breeana Dunbar

Workplace Flexibility: Are Your Employees Taking It Too Far?

In today’s digital world, employees expect the opportunity to work in times and places that suit them. But too much of a good thing can cause problems for your business, so read on for some of the warning signs for when you might need to get some structure back.

The days of being chained to a desk 9 to 5 are disappearing, as companies embrace the digital tools that free their talent to work from anywhere at anytime, yet still stay connected.

Strategy planning in a cute café, a conference call in transit to save time, skipping train delays to sort spreadsheets from the couch – the appeal is obvious.

The employers I talk to at Agency Iceberg know that offering freedom is a competitive way to attract and retain great people.

But cracks are showing. Some leaders are worried that productivity is taking a hit and team culture is dying, as people aren’t as present in the office. They know some staff are taking too much liberty, but they don’t want to snatch back the benefit.

 

If this sounds familiar, it might be time to tighten up flexibility in your business. Here are some questions to consider.

 

Are my employees taking advantage?

If you’ve hired well, you should have committed people! But Talent of all tenures, generations, and personal situations can lose focus when you loosen structure. Watch for signs such as missing meetings, being difficult to reach online or via mobile in agreed hours, not hitting targets, or failing to meet deadlines.

Keep an eye on increasing requests for flex-time favours that don’t suit your business.

Too many Friday afternoons off, despite the promise of making up time on the weekend, is unlikely to suit client-facing roles.

 

How much flexibility suits what we do?

Think about the type of work that must be done, and when and where it’s best performed. Consider the ideal situations for teamwork, client meetings and mentoring. What’s the right mix of in-person or online interactions for each? For example, daily in-person WIPs, weekly face-to-face strategy sessions, or continual dialogue online?

 

Should flexibility be earned?

If you give freedom to one part of the business, you should give it to all, with awareness of what’s appropriate for each role. But for new hires, it could help to set a probation phase. You can understand their working style, build trust and ensure they know what’s expected.

 

How can I get some discipline back?

When setting boundaries, look at your own behaviour first.

Are you being responsive when off site? Taking interest in your staff so they feel energised? Then ask your team how they view the situation, as they could be struggling to adjust to digital life, and you can think about how to better manage the change.

Easy ways to get structure back are booking regular in-person meetings and agreeing on hours they must be available to clients and colleagues. Set expectations for response times, regardless of where they’re working from.

 

How can tech help?

You can keep everyone in easy reach by supplying quick messaging tools (such as Skype for Business, Slack or Google Chat) and video conferencing capabilities. Project management cloud platforms such as Toggl are great for time tracking, and workflow dashboards such as Trello help you see where everyone’s up to on projects.

 

Can culture help?

You want people to be self-motivated and happy to come into the office, and to stay focused on their work when off-site.

Culture can play a big part in getting momentum back.

Set up workshops to share insights, challenges and encouragement. And there’s nothing wrong with team lunches and Friday celebrations to bring back the spark!

 

Flex is the future, but within reason!

 

Digital freedom is here, and everyone wants to embrace the benefits. Considering these questions should help you offer flexibility, while keeping productivity high, and a great company culture alive.

 

Connect with me on LinkedIn or reach out via [email protected]

 

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Mollie Anderson

Executive Assistant at TrueCommerce

7 年

I have been an remote Senior Executive Assistant for 4 years 8 months and I am always engaged, accessible, available, and pro-active. It all depends on the person you hire. I am very productive, very content and give 110% every day. https://www.dhirubhai.net/in/mollie-anderson-0125082a/detail/recent-activity/posts/

Sandhya Nagarajan

Business Analyst at AQA

7 年

Rather than seeing this as a failure of flexible working, please can we see how and where the people manager has failed to monitor and communicate the short comings effectively? Why was the Employee missing his/her meetings not discussed in the weekly 1-2-1's?

Mordechai Kilstein

BI/ETL/Data/SQL Ninja

7 年

I think the core of the issue is not carrot/stick for flexibility, but hiring people that will own the work. As an owner, work doesn't stop at 5 nor does it start at 8.... Yet if you need a 3 hour lunch or greet the kids when they come home from school, you should be able to.

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Dr. Robyn S. Joppy

Serial entrepreneur, launched the largest virtual hair, beauty, and wellness trade show of its kind, award-winning international speaker India and UAE, bestselling author, international compliance and integrity expert.

7 年

Interesting article. I am definitely a fan of flexibility but within reason. From my experience, not every "professional" employee is responsible and or disciplined. While working with a former employer, I permitted employees to telecommute; however, they would not be available to answer calls at times. When they did answer, loud voices could be heard in the background and I was asked to hold on while the employee addressed their children, husband, or visiting friends (during work hours). When I noticed a decline in productivity, quality, and missed deadlines, I decided to change the parameters for working remotely. I had given my staff free reign; I gave them a yard and they took 20! When I turned things around, they turned on me! They took advantage and the opportunity for granted. I highly recommend establishing guidelines/expectations when considering allowing employees to work remotely; appropriately communicating both are crucial to its success. It can be a win win for everyone!

Mark Wieland

Owner at Marks Enterprises

7 年

I think I spend too much time out of my own office ??

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