The Economist - USA (2022-03-12)

(Antfer) #1

54 Business  TheEconomistMarch12th 2022


Thefutureoftheoffice

Work life in balance


A


fter severalfalse starts, office work­
ers  are  returning  to  their  desks—for
good  this  time,  employers  hope.  As  co­
vid­19  restrictions  are  scaled  back,  people
must again get used to crowds (see Bartle­
by). Financial giants such Wells Fargo have
joined Wall Street titans such as JPMorgan
Chase  and  Morgan  Stanley  in  urging  peo­
ple  back  to  the  office.  The  great  return  is
afoot  in  big  tech,  too.  Meta  and  Microsoft
are  asking  employees  to  return  by  late
March.  Most  big  Silicon  Valley  campuses
will  be  fuller  from  April.  Many  bosses
share  the  sentiment  of  James  Gorman,
Morgan  Stanley’s  chief  executive:  if  you
can eat out, you can come to the office. 
For purveyors of remote­working tech,
the gradual unwinding of the grand work­
from­home experiment is already proving
rough.  Slack,  a  corporate­chat  app  owned
by  Salesforce,  a  software  giant,  projects
slowing  sales  growth  to  20%  in  the  next
quarter,  year  on  year,  down  from  50%  at
the  height  of  the  pandemic.  In  February
Zoom  reported  that  growth  had  slowed
globally, with revenues in Europe, the Mid­
dle East and Africa down by 9%, compared
with  a  year  earlier,  and  the  number  of  its
video­conferencing  clients  had  declined
relative to the previous quarter. Its market
value has sunk as a result (see chart). 
The return to the office will be no picnic
for employers, either. Most are scrambling
to  figure  out  what  the  future  of  work  will
look  like.  For  many,  the  most  pressing
question is: how hybrid will that future be?
In  the  short  run,  almost  certainly  pretty
hybrid.  Apple  is  bringing  staff  back  to  the
office one day a week to start. By May 23rd,
the  iPhone­maker  will  require  them  to
come in three days a week. Citigroup, hsbc
and  Standard  Chartered  let  their  bankers
work from home on some days. 
That seems only natural. Combining of­
fice and home toil appeared to do wonders
for work­life balance. And on the face of it,
the past two years have shown that people
can work well from anywhere, says Despi­
na  Katsikakis  of  Cushman  &  Wakefield,  a
property  consultancy.  Productivity,  col­
laboration and focus seem to have held up. 
The problem, says Ms Katsikakis, is that
“all of the other elements are suffering.” In
one global survey of more than 600 compa­
ny  leaders  and  human­resources  profes­
sionals,  for  example,  more  than  80%  re­
sponded  that  hybrid  set­ups  were  emo­
tionally  exhausting  for  employees.  Many

ringing endorsements of it made by bosses
and workers in mid­2021 turned into deep
reservations  just  a  few  months  later.  As
more people return to the office, concerns
about  hybridisation  are  likely  to  become
ever more acute. Rather than being the best
of both worlds, is hybrid work really a rot­
ten compromise?
The  hybrid  workplace  is  failing  to  live
up to expectations in a number of ways. For
one  thing,  it  is  no  substitute  for  the  buzz
and the chatter of the pre­pandemic office.
Many  people  hanker  after  the  socialising,
camaraderie  and  shared  experience,  even
if  getting  used  to  it  again  may  take  time.
Even  small  amounts  of  remote  work  can
have a big impact on the frequency of face­
to­face interactions in the office. By one es­

timate,spendinganaverageofthreedays
eachweekintheofficecanlimitencoun­
tersbetweenanytwoworkersby64%com­
paredwithpre­pandemicnorms.Thegap
widensto84%inpotentialinteractionsfor
thoseintheofficetwodaysa week.
Asofficesfillup,workerswhoturnup
inpersonmaythereforeforgecloserbonds
with their teams and company leaders
than remote ones. Proximity bias—the
subconscioustendency tovalue andre­
wardphysicalpresence—maythendisad­
vantagewomen,minoritiesandparentsof
youngchildren,whoarekeeneronhome
workingthanothergroups.
Arelateddrawbackisthedeclineinca­
sualencountersoutsideanemployee’sin­
ner circle.Inthe1970sThomasAllen,a
management scholar, discovered that
communication between office workers
dropped offexponentiallywith distance
between their desks; those on separate
floorsorinseparatebuildingsalmostnev­
erspoke.A studyofmorethan60,000em­
ployeesatMicrosoft,a techgiant,inthe
firsthalfof 2020 showedthatvirtualwork­
ers,too,werelesslikelytoconnectwith
peopletheywerenotalreadycloseto.
Before  the  pandemic  many  companies
were  going  to  great  lengths  to  overcome
the “Allen curve” and engineer serendipity.
Google,  which  credits  spontaneous  chats
for products such as Gmail and Street View,
designed its Silicon Valley headquarters to
ensure  that  any  one  Googler  could  reach
any other by walking no more than two and
a  half  minutes.  Bathrooms  at  the  head­
quarters for Pixar, an animation studio co­
founded  by  Steve  Jobs,  Apple’s  late  boss,
were  located  in  the  central  atrium  so  that
people  from  different  teams  would  cross
paths as they heeded nature’s call.
Some managers have tried to boost con­
nections in the hybrid world by scheduling
more  virtual  meetings,  sending  more
emails or firing off more instant messages.

Hybrid work was meant to be the best ofbothworlds.Isit?

The architecture of workplace interaction 

Zooming in and out
Zoom Video Communications
Market capitalisation, $bn

Sources:RefinitivDatastream;WHO

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Delta Omicron

WHOdeclares
covid-1pandemic

Variants of
concern designated
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