What employees are saying about the future of remote work
Employees want more certainty about post-pandemic working arrangements - even if you don’t yet know what to tell them.
"As organisational leaders chart the path toward the post-pandemic world, they need to communicate more frequently with their employees-even if their plans have yet to solidify fully"
As organisations look to the post-pandemic future, many are planning a hybrid virtual model that combines remote work with time in the office. This sensible decision follows solid productivity increases during the pandemic.
But while productivity may have gone up, many employees report feeling anxious and burned out. Unless leaders address the sources of employee anxiety, pandemic-style productivity gains may prove unsustainable in the future. That’s because anxiety is known to reduce job satisfaction, negatively affect interpersonal relationships with colleagues, and decrease work performance.
Our survey results make the source of anxiety clear: employees feel they’ve yet to hear enough about their employers’ plans for post-Covid-19 working arrangements. Organisations may have announced a general intent to embrace hybrid virtual work going forward, but too few of them, employees say, have shared detailed guidelines, policies, expectations, and approaches. And the lack of remote-relevant specifics is leaving employees anxious.
As organisational leaders chart the path toward the post-pandemic world, they need to communicate more frequently with their employees-even if their plans have yet to solidify fully. Organisations that have articulated more specific policies and approaches for the future workplace have seen employee well-being and productivity rise.
Feeling included
Even high-level communication about post-Covid-19 working arrangements boosts employee well-being and productivity. But organisations that convey more detailed, remote-relevant policies and approaches see greater increases. Employees who feel included in more detailed communication are nearly five times more likely to report increased productivity. Because communicating about the future can drive performance outcomes, today, leaders should consider increasing the frequency of their employee updates-both to share what’s already decided and to communicate what is still uncertain.
Communication breakdown
Valuable as a detailed vision for post-pandemic work might be to employees, 40 per cent of them say they’ve yet to hear about any vision from their organisations, and another 28 per cent say that what they’ve heard remains vague.
Anxiety at work
At organisations that are communicating vaguely, or not at all, about the future of post-pandemic work, nearly half of employees say it’s causing them concern or anxiety. Anxiety is known to decrease work performance, reduce job satisfaction, and negatively affect interpersonal relationships with colleagues, among other ills. For the global economy, the loss of productivity because of poor mental health-including anxiety-might be as high as $1 trillion per year.
Burning out
The lack of clear communication about the future of post-pandemic work also contributes to employee burnout. Nearly half of employees surveyed say they’re feeling some symptoms of being burned out at work. That may be an underestimate since employees experiencing burnout are less likely to respond to survey requests, and the most burned-out individuals may have already left the workforce-as have many women, who’ve been disproportionately affected by the Covid-19 crisis.
Share more
Burnout is especially pronounced for people feeling anxious due to a lack of organisational communication. These employees were almost three times more likely to report feeling burned out. The obvious recommendation for organisational leaders: share more with employees, even if you’re uncertain about the future, to help improve employee well-being now.
Employees want flexibility
So how do organisations help their anxious and burned-out employees? One way is to find out what employees want for the future. More than half of employees told us they would like their organisations to adopt more flexible hybrid virtual-working models, in which employees are sometimes on-premises and sometimes working remotely. A hybrid model can help organisations make the most of talent wherever it resides, lower costs, and strengthen organisational performance.
Talent at risk
In fact, more than a quarter of those surveyed reported that they would consider switching employers if their organisation returned to fully on-site work. Of course, even employees who say they might depart could ultimately decide to remain, depending on the policies companies end up adopting, the availability of jobs at the same or better rates of pay, and the role of automation in shifting the tasks people do.
Staying home
In describing the hybrid model of the future, more than half of government and corporate workers report that they would like to work from home at least three days a week once the pandemic is over. Across geographies, US employees are the most interested in having access to remote work, with nearly a third saying they would like to work remotely full time.
What parents say
Employees with young children are the most likely to prefer flexible work locations, with only 8 per cent suggesting they would like to see a fully on-site model in the future. Employees without children under 18 are nearly three times as likely to prefer on-site work, but the majority still prefer more flexible models.
Hopes and fears
Across the board, employees are eager to see organisations put a greater emphasis on flexibility, competitive compensation, and well-being once the pandemic is over-and conversely, they’re concerned that future work, regardless of whether it is on-site or remote, will negatively affect these needs. Employees also fear that on-site work will lead to a greater chance of getting sick and that remote work will reduce community and collaboration between colleagues.
Policy matters
Which working arrangements and related policies do employees say will lead to the highest levels of well-being, social cohesion, and productivity? More than a third of respondents ranked clear hours and expectations for collaboration in their top five policies; several other collaboration policies, including technologies that enable on-site employees to dial in to remote meetings and guidelines for documentation, also received significant support. Collaboration tools, and training for those tools, are also rated highly for employees, as does reimbursement for remote-work office setups. Microconnectivity policies, meanwhile-from small team events to a listening and response strategy-were top policies for more than a quarter of all respondents.