How hybrid work can boost productivity and trust

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Lily Zheng Lily Zheng is an Influencer

Fairness, Access, Inclusion, and Representation Strategist. Bestselling Author of Reconstructing DEI and DEI Deconstructed. They/Them. LinkedIn Top Voice on Racial Equity. Inquiries: lilyzheng.co.

A Return To Office mandate is a funny thing. A trade-off of lower workforce productivity, morale, retention, engagement, and trust in exchange for...managers feeling more in control. It's more a sign of insecurity and incompetence than sound decision-making. The fact that 80% of executives who have pushed for RTO mandates have later regretted their decision only makes the point further, and yet every few months more leaders line up to pad this statistic. In case your leaders have forgotten, return to office mandates are associated with: 🔻 16% lower intent to stay among the highest-performing employees (Gartner) 🔻 10% less trust, psychological safety, and relationship quality between workers and their managers (Great Place to Work) 🔻 22% of employees from marginalized groups becoming more likely to search for new jobs (Greenhouse) 🔻 No significant change in financial performance while guaranteeing damage to employee satisfaction (Ding and Ma, 2024) The thing is, we KNOW how to do hybrid work well at this point. 🎯 Allow teams to decide on in-person expectations, and hold people accountable to it—high flexibility; high accountability. 🎯 Make in-person time unique and valuable, with brainstorming, events, and culture-building activities—not video calls all day in the office. 🎯 Value outcomes, not appearances, of productivity—reward those who get their work done regardless of where they do it. 🎯 Train inclusive managers, not micromanagers—build in them the skills and confidence to lead with trust rather than fear and insecurity. Leaders that fly in the face of all this data to insist that workers return to office "OR ELSE" communicate one thing: they are the kinds of leaders that place their own egos and comfort above their shareholders and employees alike. Faced with the very real test of how to design the hybrid workforce of the future, these leaders chose to throw a tantrum in their bid to return to the past, and their organizations will suffer for it. The leaders that will thrive in this time? Those that are willing to do the work. Those that are willing to listen to their workforce, skill up to meet new needs, and claim their rewards in the form of the best talent, higher productivity, and the highest level of worker loyalty and trust. Will that be you?

Lily Zheng

Fairness, Access, Inclusion, and Representation Strategist. Bestselling Author of Reconstructing DEI and DEI Deconstructed. They/Them. LinkedIn Top Voice on Racial Equity. Inquiries: lilyzheng.co.

12mo

RESOURCES: The Data Is In: Return-to-Office Mandates Aren’t Worth the Talent Risks https://www.gartner.com/en/articles/the-data-is-in-return-to-office-mandates-aren-t-worth-the-talent-risks How Return-to-Office Mandates Pose Risks to Productivity, Well-Being, and Retention https://www.greatplacetowork.com/resources/blog/how-return-to-office-mandates-pose-risks-productivity-wellbeing-retention How unpopular are return-to-office mandates? 99% of companies who had one saw a drop in employee satisfaction, study finds https://fortune.com/2024/01/26/return-to-office-job-satisfaction-financial-performance-study/ 80% of bosses say they regret earlier return-to-office plans https://www.cnbc.com/2023/08/11/80percent-of-bosses-say-they-regret-earlier-return-to-office-plans.html The data is in: RTO policies don't improve employee performance or company value, but controlling bosses don't care https://www.businessinsider.com/rto-policies-dont-improve-employee-performance-company-value-controlling-bosses-2024-1

Sara H.

I help small fundraising teams raise more money. Fundraising Plans | Consulting | Coaching

12mo

What are your thoughts about employers who do this to avoid layoffs? Essentially, they are forcing people to quit who aren't able to go back to working in an office for a variety of reasons.

Pamela Hayter

Freelance Senior Event Coordinator | Remote Advocate

12mo

God all of this. Thank you for putting this together.

R. Makana Risser Chai

Training better managers for Hawai'i.

12mo

Thank you Lily Zheng for the data. I’m rereading the fabulous book The Art of Gathering by Priya Parker and was thinking about her first chapter, WHY are you gathering? When there are deep, meaningful reasons, deep meaningful results occur.

Kris Østergaard

Bestselling author, researcher, and keynote speaker. Focus on innovation, responsible business, and building human-centric corporate culture

11mo
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Donna Kennedy

Head of People and Talent

12mo

Very thought provoking, great post!

Marca Clark, MSOD

I build strong organizations by growing people's potential, skills, commitment, and capacity for change.

12mo

Insightful post, thanks for the clear and compelling argument.

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