SMART WORK ANYWHERE
Hybrid isn’t just a floorplan
— it’s a formula unique to each organization. We call it Smart Work Anywhere.
Designing the future work
experience means being open-minded and experimenting with what the right version of
hybrid looks like. Businesses that get it right will likely attract and retain the
best talent in a competitive landscape.
When it comes to the future
work experience, there’s a lot of buzz in the business world about "hybrid" and
"flexibility", but what would the reality look like, and is it really the right
answer for every organization?
Employees are not the same
people as they were in 2020, and neither are the organizations that employ them.
This means that companies may need to forge a new relationship with their employees,
and make no mistake: right now, organizations are embroiled in a war for talent, so
it’s never been more important to offer the best employee experience.
We don’t know what the future
will throw at us — locations and formats will likely change. At Accenture, we’ve
stopped looking for the hybrid model and are focusing on how we create experiences
that give employees autonomy, support and purpose wherever they are.
Five beliefs and
why they’re flawed
We’re hearing a lot of
rumblings about how employers and employees envisage the future of their working
experience, and some impassioned arguments in one direction or another. We’ve
looked into them properly, and we think there’s some critical thinking and
adjustment to be done if companies are going to create a successful future work
experience.
01 Belief: Employees want
"hybrid"

Reality: Employees want
the freedom to choose
Everyone is talking about
hybrid models as the future of work, and Accenture research finds that 83% of
employees would like to work in some sort of hybrid way of working.1
But what are they really asking for?
A quick online search will
unveil academic analyses of how people define “hybrid working”, and it’s generally a
formula that combines remote working with office working and a third space. An
Accenture Research survey with 9,326 global workers found that when employees ask
for “hybrid” they are really asking for three key things.2
Firstly, autonomy – moving from
a hierarchical relationship to an equitable one where employees are given the
freedom to manage their own time. Secondly, they are asking for support to be the
best they can be physically and mentally and to reach their career potential.
Thirdly, they are asking for purpose – work needs to align with what’s important to
them and nurture a sense of belonging.
Employees have regained the
time they used to spend commuting and have discovered the joy of gently working
through the laundry pile while their coffee brews during the week, which frees them
up for more meaningful, restorative weekends. Many are fighting to keep things this
way. Hard evidence that many people can do their jobs just as effectively from home
has sparked a fundamental shift in power between employers and their employees.
The next generation of workers
prize the freedom to choose even more highly: a recent Forbes survey revealed that
38% of Gen-Z regard work-life balance as a top priority when choosing an employer.3
This is reportedly more than previous generations and suggests a growing demand for
freedom to choose how they work.
What do organizations
need to do?
Rebuild your employee-employer
relationship. Employers need to re-evaluate their relationship with their employees,
including how and when they communicate. No two organizations will be starting from
the same point, so solutions will look different for each setup but all will have
one thing in common: an open-minded approach to change, to negotiation, and to
compromise — like any good relationship.
02 Belief: Employees want to work
at home
Reality: Employees
should be asked what they want regularly
To get the future of work
right, many organizations are asking employees how they want to work. At Accenture,
we're doing the same, and our results show that what employees think they want
(e.g., "to work from home”) and where they feel they work best (e.g., "I work best
when I can bounce ideas off other people face to face"), don't always match up.

Of the workers who said they
wanted to work remotely for half (or more) of their time, 55% reported in the same
survey that they would be most productive onsite.4
A potential explanation for
this inconsistency is that their knee-jerk response is to keep tight hold of the
setup that has enabled them to do online yoga at lunchtime or spend quality time
with their children after school, but they haven’t necessarily played out how to
balance what they want and how they work best. It’s easy to answer each question in
isolation, but the combined answers are difficult to reconcile. In short, how do
they work out when they’re getting on a train and when they’re staying home?
In addition, there’s the fact
that people may understandably be concerned that this will the only time they’re
asked this question by their employer. This pandemic has (we can only hope) been a
once-in-a-lifetime experience, upturning everything we had taken for granted. Is
this, therefore, a once-in-a-career opportunity for workers to make a bid for remote
working? People’s responses to employers’ surveys are influenced by the assumption
that they won’t be asked the same questions again in six months, a year, or five
years from now. They don’t think they’ll have the chance to change their minds.
There’s a lesson to learn:
people are probably answering the question about how they want to work based on
complex factors that include their future aspirations, fears and assumptions on what
the future will be like. The key is to dig deeper into how people make their
decisions and allow for nuance and the flexibility for things to change – an
approach we describe as Expressive Segmentation.5
Most importantly of all,
organizations should pledge to ask the same questions on a regular basis – and
follow through.
What do organizations
need to do?
Rethink the way you
communicate. Before they sell off their real estate, organizations should think
beyond asking employees in a survey, “How do you want to work?”. Getting
foundational research right to uncover tacit needs is key, and the best way to get
accurate responses that can be converted to action is to be transparent and creative
in communications — that means asking in different ways and explaining how
employees’ answers will be used and how often they’ll be asked. Employers can’t stop
at asking once. It’s critical to measure behaviors to understand if the changes
you’re implementing are having a positive impact, or if needs are changing.
Organizations that don’t do this risk investing in costly solutions that won’t work.
03 Belief: Pandemic work
challenges will pass

Reality: Employers and
employees will need to unlearn bad habits
Some pandemic-driven changes
were beneficial, and we won't want to lose them, like replacing a stressful commute
with more sleep or a local walk, or being home for children’s bedtimes. But some bad
habits have formed, and it’ll take time and conscious effort to reverse them.
First, the way we work has
become unsustainable: scheduling back-to-back meetings without a bathroom break for
five hours has become normal, even though we all know it’s not healthy. Among many
challenges the pandemic wrought on employees was an increased risk of redundancy at
the hands of employers who reluctantly had to make big changes to ensure survival.
This prompted employees to make a desperate bid to be constantly “on”, and to be
seen to deliver maximum value, which is infinitely harder to do remotely than from
the office — and certainly not workable long-term.
Of course, since then, the
landscape has shifted and organizations have ramped up recruitment drives, which
puts employees in a stronger position to choose the employer that offers them the
healthiest, most rewarding work experience.
Second, inequalities have been
exacerbated by the pandemic. A survey by the Office For National Statistics (UK)
showed that as people began to return to work in April 2021, men spent 18 minutes
less doing unpaid household work on an average day. Women, on the other hand,
continued to perform just as much household work as they did during lockdown. This
could, in theory, mean that men get a headstart on increasing their performance,
leading to women missing out on promotions.6
New joiners are finding
themselves on the back foot, missing out on building relationships with colleagues
through chance interactions at the coffee machine or in the elevator, plus they’re
not getting the benefits of informal mentoring. Yet another inequality is felt by
people of an introverted nature, who may feel their voices have been lost behind the
screen during the pandemic, which can make them feel unsupported, and certainly
means neurodiversity is compromised.
Our research finds that there
are specific groups of people who prefer to work remotely: women, people who have
been at organizations longer and part-time workers, for example. Flexible working
risks widening gaps and creating new ones.
What do organizations
need to do?
Design for positive behavior
change. The future work experience will need to reinforce positive behaviors and
discourage negative ones. Key to this is an employer/employee relationship built on
trust, that enables employees to return to a healthy workload, wherever they’re
working. The physical space, digital tools and culture may need to reset boundaries
— and every person at every level should be vigilantly nurturing that culture. And,
of course, inclusion and diversity must be at the core of every touch point – and
that means neurodiversity as well as demographics.
04 Belief: Success means maximum
productivity
Reality: Maximum
productivity comes at a cost
Workers are more productive
than ever, but they also seem to be more burnt out. According to an Indeed survey,
over half (52%) of respondents are experiencing burnout in 2021 — up from the 43%
who said the same in Indeed’s pre-Covid-19 survey.7

Maximum productivity may not be
sustainable. This means that, to retain employees, businesses should shift their
focus away from increasing productivity and decreasing office space. Employees are
people, not resources, and businesses rely on these people being able to work.
When we return to work,
productivity may even go down so organizations may need to adjust their
expectations. The intensity of the pandemic has seeped through to the way we work,
and it simply isn’t reasonable to expect people to continue at such a level.
Intensity does not equal productivity. Some of the most productive days at work
center around spontaneous, lively conversations in the break-out space, which aren’t
possible when people feel they’re under immense pressure.
Now, more than ever, employers
must put purpose and wellbeing at the top of their success metrics – and it can’t
simply be lip service. Rather than just giving people the opportunity to take a
break, organizations should insist upon it. They should set boundaries and actively
enforce them so that people can find and maintain a healthy line between their
professional and private lives.
Get this essential reset wrong,
and the risk is that people may simply walk. If the pandemic has taught us nothing
else, it’s taught us that life is precious, so why work yourself sick for one
employer when you know there are others that will value your wellbeing?
Get this reset right, and
businesses will reap the rewards: improved employee experience leads to improved
customer experience and increased customer retention. And it works: when Accenture
Interactive helped a UK-based building society to reorient to employee experience,
average branch NPS increased to +90 and customer satisfaction increased to 99%.
What do organizations
need to do?
Measure for sustainable
productivity. This means abandoning presenteeism and aiming instead for high quality
outcomes that can be maintained long term. An example of this would be measuring
your customers’ relationship with your employee – did they feel listened to? Was
your employee motivated to support the customer because they were being supported in
turn? For organizations, that might mean delivering the same exceptional results but
on a more reasonable timeline. Designing a workplace experience focused on outcomes
and wellbeing will attract and retain the best talent out there and increase
customer satisfaction, loyalty and value.
05 Belief: Location is the most
important factor

Reality: The most
important thing to figure out is how we enable smart work anywhere
The literature on hybrid
working is dominated by calls to action to update floor plans, invest in remote
working tools and update employee contracts to flexible working. These are not
wrong, but the full extent of the reality is more complex, so we need to think more
deeply:
Space: space is a combination
of elements like format, ergonomics, furniture, lighting, acoustics and branding –
to name a few – that need to be applied across offices, the home and third spaces,
such as co-working sites.
Digital: technology
infrastructure and remote working tools are key, but if you don’t invest in support
and training it doesn’t matter how snazzy they are – employees won’t be able to use
them.
Culture: the personality of
your organization needs to be felt across every touch point. This means creating
rituals, support programs and incentives that build a sense of belonging wherever
your workers are.
Operations: these are the
policies, standards and processes that enable you to diffuse culture and positive
experiences consistently across digital and physical spaces.
And finally, responsibility:
inclusion, diversity, sustainability, wellbeing. In a brave new world where
organizations are expected to take a stance on right and wrong, these are the
ethical fibers that should run through the heart of your future work experience.
What do organizations
need to do?
Don’t look for a silver bullet.
We recommend not worrying about finding the dream hybrid model – solutions will look
different for every organization and we are in unchartered territory, so seeking out
a magic formula won’t yield the right results. Organizations who will get this right
will be prepared for experimentation. Testing low-tech solutions that focus on
culture and responsibility across physical and digital experiences will help to
achieve success. In parallel, they will likely invest in support and training, and
create policies and processes that can be replicated across any future models.
WHAT TO DO NEXT
We’re questioning these five
beliefs to design a future work experience that lasts. Will you join us?
01 Rebuild
relationships
Build a new relationship with employees based on freedom of choice.
Build a new relationship with employees based on freedom of choice.
02 Rethink
communication
Work with employees to understand the role of work for them but remember that sometimes we're at our best when we are pushed out of our comfort zone.
Work with employees to understand the role of work for them but remember that sometimes we're at our best when we are pushed out of our comfort zone.
03 Design for
change
Consciously design the future of work around keeping positive behaviors and reversing those that lead to burnout and exclusion.
Consciously design the future of work around keeping positive behaviors and reversing those that lead to burnout and exclusion.
04 Sustainable
productivity
Defining success as employee wellbeing, belonging and the outcomes they produce will help to ensure you get the best, from the best.
Defining success as employee wellbeing, belonging and the outcomes they produce will help to ensure you get the best, from the best.
05 No silver
bullet
Don’t get hung up on locations. Use physical space, digital support, and culture as lenses to test and learn your future work experiences.
Don’t get hung up on locations. Use physical space, digital support, and culture as lenses to test and learn your future work experiences.
Reimagining the employee
experience is an important step on the journey to securing long-term growth.
Some variety of hybrid working
may be exactly what many companies need to succeed — the challenge is defining what
exactly that looks like and how to evolve it in response to people’s needs as they
change.
Imagine the future
The future of work experience
is not going to be easy – we’ll need to test and learn. Let’s see what could make
the difference between a good and bad experience.
Working from the
office
Bad hybrid
experience
The train was packed at peak
time. When you arrived at the office, you needed some time to decompress from the
stressful journey.
You booked a space, but the
temperamental technology failed, so colleagues working remotely couldn’t join the
meeting. You had to reschedule and push the timeline back.
At lunch, you had to eat at
your desk as there was no space in the eating area.
After lunch you had some
focused work to do, but your desk is located underneath the air con, which is cold
and noisy. Also, you were distracted by your colleagues talking and having meetings
in the open plan office.
The journey home was the same
as the journey in – hot and busy. When you arrived home, you planned to go to the
gym, but you felt drained from the day, so chose to have an early night. You
couldn’t sleep, due to worrying about how much work you needed to catch up on and
the idea of doing it all again.
Good hybrid
experience
You got up early to miss the
rush hour, knowing you can leave earlier in the afternoon, which suits you. As you
were one of the first people in, you got some focused work done in the social garden
area.
You joined your team in one of
the collaboration spaces, which you’d prebooked via an app, where you specified the
number of people and setup you needed so the space is a suitable size to stay safe.
The rest of the team joined virtually and raised their hands digitally, so their
voices were heard.
The team was buzzing after the
collaboration session with the client, so they, as well as a few others from the
office, all went to lunch together. You set your status to “out to lunch” so
colleagues knew you were unavailable.
You had a private meeting with
a client virtually, so you went into one of the available private sound-proof
booths. In the booth you set the temperature and lighting to suit you. After your
meeting, you headed home before the rush hour, as arranged.
Once back in your hometown, you
went to the gym. The gym was quiet as most people work 9 to 5. After your gym
session, you met some friends for dinner locally.
Working from home or a
third space
Bad hybrid
experience
You didn’t sleep the night
before because you saw an instant message come in late from your boss.
You went straight from your bed
to your computer. You were going to have breakfast but one of your colleagues rang.
The conversation went on longer than planned, and you had another meeting straight
after, so you lost the time you’d set aside to prepare for the meeting. In addition,
the internet connection was slow and you were worried about using the virtual
collaboration tool so you didn’t use it.
Every time you got up for a
break, you heard the chat notifications or your phone ringing. In the end you didn’t
leave your desk.
You were so far behind on your
work, you worked into the night. Once you’d finished, you ate some food out of the
freezer – not a healthy option but quick and easy.
You felt completely overwhelmed
and anxious, but you didn’t feel like you could talk to your boss or colleagues, as
you believed this would come across as weak, and that you can’t do your job.
Good hybrid
experience
You listened to a podcast
whilst eating breakfast. Before 09:00, you checked your e-mails for meetings. You
felt prepared for the day.
You ran a collaborative session
from home with colleagues in the office as well as some virtually. The session went
well — everyone contributed, and you felt confident using the tool because you’d had
training.
You were concerned that one of
your team wasn’t coping, so you offered to meet them in a third party place of their
choice. This allowed them to open up in an environment they felt comfortable in. You
met in a cafe workspace, where the colleague shared a few concerns. The talk really
helped the colleague.
You had some focused work to
do, so you clicked your Teams to busy, had a cup of tea in your branded mug that
your team sent and began to work. Your home office has great WIFI, the option of a
standing desk, as well as lots of natural light.
You’re a keen gardener and your
office faces your balcony where you’ve got some pot plants that work sent. It is the
perfect place for focused work.
You worked a little later, but
you didn’t mind as you were in a flow. Once you finished, you read a book to close
out the day.
Our leaders

Heather Martin
Group Design Director – Fjord, part of Accenture
Interactive
Follow me:
linked inTogether, we can pioneer your
future work experience, from space to culture and digital. Let’s get ready for Smart
Work Anywhere.
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