One-size-fits-all hybrid work policies are more likely than
other options to have a negative impact on employee engagement,
retention and the amount of work done each day, according to new
hybrid work research from The Hackett Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: HCKT).
At the same time, giving employees greater choice drives
improvements in all these areas, the research found.
The research also found that working virtually does not prevent
most employees from effectively collaborating and connecting,
except workers with less than a year tenure with their employers,
who felt these activities were better done in-person with
co-workers. Regardless, companies need to improve their support for
a wider range of tools and systems to facilitate this.
According to the “Thriving in the Emerging Hybrid Workplace”
research from The Hackett Group®, the impact of workplace policies
on engagement, retention and productivity varies. But single
mandated policies or policies mandated for all workers in jobs that
can be done remotely by workforce segment are more likely to lead
to decreased engagement, reduced desire to stay with the employer,
a decrease in the amount of work done each day, and increased
commuting time. Giving employees choice and manager-employee
negotiated virtual work arrangements had the strongest positive
impact on engagement and improved retention.
Working virtually also does not prevent most employees from
effectively collaborating and connecting, and forcing them to spend
most of their time in the office may be counterproductive, the
research found. But companies need to adopt an approach that allows
flexibility and provide better support for collaboration and
connection to ensure high performance and satisfaction.
Most Companies Have Embraced Hybrid Work Policies
The research found that most companies have continued the work
from home strategies that were developed in response to the
pandemic -- 85% of all workers whose jobs can be done virtually are
currently either working from home (42%) or have a hybrid work
arrangement (43%) where they are in the office 20-80% of the time.
And the trend is continuing to shift towards hybrid work. Staff in
corporate finance, procurement, and other business services
functions are even more likely to work from home than others, with
survey respondents in these areas saying they are spending 75% of
their time working remotely.
Tools and Systems Key to Improving Collaboration and
Connection
The main benefit of the return to the office has been increased
collaboration and connections among team members. In fact,
significant numbers of respondents – from 25-42% -- indicated
increased or greatly increased ability to collaborate. The
remainder of the study respondents, however, said that more
in-person time had not impacted their ability to collaborate,
regardless of their company’s policy.
Top performers have much stronger processes to enable
collaboration and connection among employees, the study found.
Significantly, a comparison of data for top performers versus peers
found that giving employees discretion over how they work and
effectively supporting remote, hybrid, and on-premise modes is
associated with better collaboration, stronger connection to
colleagues and the organization, and greater engagement. Employees
at top performers are also more confident of their ability to do
their jobs in their preferred work mode, and feel more supported by
their bosses in their work mode choices. Providing flexibility and
support for all work modes is strongly correlated with improved
effectiveness within teams and across the organization.
The biggest factor making virtual collaboration more challenging
is not feeling included, the study found. Lack of trust, inadequate
tools, and poor coordination and communication processes are also
prominent obstacles. While video meeting tools, instant messaging,
and document sharing systems have become ubiquitous, many highly
effective tools for virtual collaboration, including digital white
boards and knowledge management platforms, show low adoption rates.
Virtual town halls and informal meetings are also among the most
effective virtual tools to enable connections among employees.
While there is a strong perception among some corporate leaders
that virtual methods for building connections are inferior to
in-person methods, The Hackett Group’s study shows that both can be
equally effective. Only two out of ten methods enabling connection
– team social events and team building -- showed an effectiveness
gap between virtual and in-person applications.
The effects of workplace policies on collaboration and
connection do vary, the study found. Single mandated and remote
first policies are the most polarizing generating notable positive
and negative reactions. Respondents working under single mandated
policies reported the most increases in collaboration, as many are
designed to ensure teams are in the office on the same days.
Connections to managers grow most when policies are mandated by
segment. Connections to team members, to employer culture/values,
and employer mission/goals rise to the greatest extent for those
with freedom to choose working arrangements.
HR and Business Leaders Must Collaborate on Hybrid Workplace
Models
The Hackett Group’s research recommended that HR and business
leaders work together to design effective hybrid workplace models.
Key recommendations included: practice open communications and
active listening; implement policies and support practices/tools to
enable a diversity of work styles; equip managers and employees to
continuously evolve work design and practices; schedule
unstructured/informal meeting opportunities; be purposeful about
using in-person time for creative work, relationship-building, and
silo-breaking activities; monitor and enhance employee performance
drivers such as wellness and engagement; and measure employees on
results and outcomes, not hours worked or face time.
“Our findings suggest that HR and business leaders need to dig a
bit deeper to understand the factors that drive the ability of
employees to collaborate,” said The Hackett Group Senior Research
Director Tony DiRomualdo. “Increasing in-person time alone – absent
any other measures – is not really necessarily going to move the
needle much. For example, if you go back to an office where it’s
loud, it’s noisy, you don’t have good places to interact with
people, chances are you may struggle to connect and to collaborate
just as much as you might if working virtually.”
“The major success factors for companies are flexibility and
trust,” said DiRomualdo. “Companies need to understand that
employees have a diverse range of responsibilities and work styles,
and they should implement policies and support practices and tools
that enable staff to excel in their jobs regardless of
location.”
The full results of The Hackett Group’s “2022 Thriving in the
Emerging Hybrid Workplace” research is available only to members of
The Hackett Group’s HR Advisory Program. The findings are also
covered in this episode of The Hackett Group’s Business
Excelleration Podcast.
About The Hackett Group
The Hackett Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: HCKT) is a leading
benchmarking, research advisory and strategic consultancy firm that
enables organizations to achieve Digital World Class™
performance.
Drawing upon our unparalleled intellectual property from more
than 25,000 benchmark studies and our Hackett-Certified® best
practices repository from the world’s leading businesses –
including 97% of the Dow Jones Industrials, 93% of the Fortune 100,
73% of the DAX 40 and 52% of the FTSE 100 – captured through our
leading benchmarking platform, Quantum Leap® and our Digital
Transformation Platform, we accelerate digital transformations,
including enterprise cloud implementations.
For more information on The Hackett Group: visit
https://www.thehackettgroup.com/; email info@thehackettgroup.com;
or call (770) 225-3600.
The Hackett Group, Hackett-Certified, quadrant logo, World Class
Defined and Enabled, Quantum Leap, Digital World Class and Hackett
Excelleration Matrix are the registered marks of The Hackett
Group.
Cautionary Statement Regarding “Forward-Looking”
Statements
This release contains “forward-looking” statements within the
meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 as amended and
Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
Statements including without limitation, words such as “expects,”
“anticipates,” “intends,” “plans,” “believes,” seeks,” “estimates,”
or other similar phrases or variations of such words or similar
expressions indicating, present or future anticipated or expected
occurrences or outcomes are intended to identify such
forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are not
statements of historical fact and involve known and unknown risks,
uncertainties and other factors that may cause the Company’s actual
results, performance or achievements to be materially different
from the results, performance or achievements expressed or implied
by the forward-looking statements. Factors that may impact such
forward-looking statements include without limitation, the ability
of The Hackett Group to effectively market its digital
transformation and other consulting services, competition from
other consulting and technology companies that may have or develop
in the future, similar offerings, the commercial viability of The
Hackett Group and its services as well as other risk detailed in
The Hackett Group’s reports filed with the United States Securities
and Exchange Commission. The Hackett Group does not undertake any
duty to update this release or any forward-looking statements
contained herein.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230425005228/en/
Gary Baker, Global Communications Director - (917) 796-2391 or
gbaker@thehackettgroup.com
Hackett (NASDAQ:HCKT)
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