Originally published by the Peoria Journal Star. Reposted with permission.
The coronavirus pandemic caused a major disruption in the workspace environment introducing an entirely new office culture. With the requirement for social distancing to help contain the contagion, working in close quarters was no longer tenable.
However, work and related economic activities had to go on and a different approach to employee accommodation was necessary. This is how the hybrid work mode operating on a flexible dispersal arrangement came into being. Here is how to introduce the hybrid work mode in your company.
You need a clear policy framework with known expectations on both sides and redesigned procedures to fit the new environment before implementation. Contact areas such as receptions will need new technology to manage visitor sign in and the Greetly app offers the best solution for virtual self-serve check-ins. Your policies should ensure smooth transitions and continuity.
How you manage coordination, collaboration, and communication between teams will make or break the hybrid work mode you choose. Establish clear channels of communication between collaborating remote teams to facilitate the efficient completion of tasks and the necessary access to office resources such as data files.
Use messaging tools that keep remote workers connected to the office for continuous support and guidance at all times. Appoint persons to coordinate different activities between teams, allocate tasks, moderate virtual meetings, review progress, and generally keep things in order.
Equip your teams with the right technologies and apps that allow real-time project sharing between themselves, management, and the client providing progress updates. While at it, do not forget secure conferencing tools for virtual staff meetings to bring the teams together whenever the need arises.
A sudden and radical change in the workplace culture can create resistance and frustration that affect productivity negatively. Therefore, training marks a new beginning and workers learn the new procedures with enthusiasm while embracing the changes happily. Make this learning a continuous process to help employees cope with emerging challenges in the new system.
Adopting full remote and hybrid working models means a review of employees’ contracts to reflect the new reality. Aside from reviewing employee contracts, you will have to address legal implications and enforcement in matters of confidentiality with staff working from home.
Changing workstations may also carry tax law-related adjustments that require review obligations and entitlements for both employer and staff. How will you address disciplinary issues and work time enforcement for remote employees? Whatever the case, a little counsel from your legal team is necessary to stay within the law.