Belonging, Remote & Hybrid Culture
When co-workers don鈥檛 get together in-person, the social fabric of the organization frays. Here鈥檚 how some companies are trying to rebuild relationships.
Workers are facing a loneliness crisis 鈥 a reality that hasn鈥檛 been improved by the dramatic rise of hybrid and remote workers.
Flexible work has many benefits for workers, but social connection is a challenge. Some pre-pandemic research found that full-time
Now companies are trying to balance essential business functions that demand in-person interaction with what has become an outdated way of working.
鈥淭he tagline for how our flexible hybrid arrangement works is 鈥榝lexibility with business requirements,鈥欌 says Mayer.
鈥淲hen I have flexibility, I can go pick up my daughter; I can run to the grocery store; I can do what I need to do. But then when there鈥檚 a business requirement, a key meeting, an offsite 鈥 I need to show up to that. That鈥檚 a business requirement.鈥
Should social interaction and connection with colleagues be a business requirement? Research from 逸遊娛樂城庐 shows that having a 鈥渇un鈥 workplace drives higher levels of well-being for all ages of workers.
鈥淭here is and will always be a need for human beings to come together in the workplace, in person, in real life,鈥 says Jen Fisher, chief well-being officer at Deloitte, on the 鈥淏etter鈥 podcast. 鈥淲e need to engage鈥ecause when we鈥檙e remote, we then have a stronger connection with those people.鈥
Many workers have trepidation about what a fully remote role will mean for their professional life and social connections.
鈥淚 was hesitant to commit to a fully remote-forever position, as work relationships and collaboration have always been super important to me,鈥 shares Becky Sharp, principal data scientist at Lex Machina.
At Wind River, employee surveys showed that 92% of employees wanted flexibility and 50% of workers wanted to be fully remote. However, all employees said connection with their colleagues mattered to them.
Intentional vulnerability
One of the ways fewer in-person gatherings can stunt workplace culture is that colleagues don鈥檛 have as many opportunities to learn about one another. Rather than casually observing things about co-workers over time, hybrid and remote workplaces require more intentional sharing.
Mayer stresses the importance of vulnerability and for leaders to push past their discomfort in sharing more about their lives.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 how you build trust,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 the glue that helps us work better when we鈥檙e remote.鈥 She recommends that teams make a conscious effort to share stories with each other and build that connection into work meetings, in part because that connection is so invaluable.
鈥淭eams that don鈥檛 do that, they just go slower,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ometimes they never get there on being the best team that they could be. 鈥 This is all in service of working better together.鈥
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Making virtual 鈥渇un鈥 for hybrid and remote workers
Just because remote workers are not in the office doesn鈥檛 mean they have to be excluded from 鈥渇un鈥 activities.
At Lex Machina, a dedicated culture club plans activities such as a virtual 鈥渃ampfire鈥 where the company hired a professional storyteller and camp singer to lead employees in campfire songs. Employees were mailed kits with marshmallows and graham crackers so everyone could make s鈥檓ores 鈥 a traditional camping treat.
鈥淭hey find super creative ways to get us 鈥榯ogether鈥 remotely for fun, and it鈥檚 really successful!鈥 says Sharp. 鈥淎s a result, even though the work is remote, I have developed relationships with my co-workers and we have a lot of rich collaboration.鈥
For workers who want a more passive social experience, Lex Machina employees can log on to a 鈥渃oworking space鈥 鈥 an open meeting where people turn their cameras on and work on whatever project they like.
鈥淭his kind of mimics a coffee shop or coworking space setting, where you are around other people but aren鈥檛 directly interacting with them,鈥 Sharp says.
Tips for leaders
How can you ensure remote work really works for your team? Here鈥檚 what Mayer and Sharp recommend:
1. Enable your teams to meet their unique needs
鈥淓very team is different,鈥 says Mayer. 鈥淭heir needs are different 鈥 so really understand, what are the needs of the team and what are the needs of business?鈥
Once you have a process in place, document the policy so everyone is on the same page.
2. Push for transparency
Push for all conversations about a project to be in 鈥榩ublic,鈥欌 says Sharp. For Lex Machina, that means talking on GitHub or Slack where everyone can see the conversation.
鈥淭his ensures that people can be on the same page much more easily, especially since we鈥檙e not all hanging out such that we would catch up organically,鈥 Sharp adds. 鈥淚t also allows people to go back and look things up later.鈥
When possible, Lex Machina tries to encourage team members to work through their problems on the public channel to destigmatize asking for help.
鈥淟ex Machina has explicit expectations of their people managers to publicly discuss their questions/bugs/problems with the code,鈥 Sharp says. 鈥淭his serves as a model for vulnerability. By normalizing bugs and confusion, all team members can feel more comfortable sharing.鈥
3. Recommit to listening.
It鈥檚 one of the most important high-trust leadership behaviors and Mayer says listening is even more crucial in a remote or hybrid work environment.
鈥淪ometimes we make assumptions,鈥 Mayer says. 鈥淚 always ask leaders, 鈥楬ow do you know? Have you done a listening session? Have you done a survey? What鈥檚 your data?鈥欌
Make sure your remote work policies have plenty of input from the people who will be affected by them.
4. Demand that in-person meetings are purpose driven
鈥淧eople come together for four reasons: to create, to connect, to celebrate, and to learn,鈥 says Mayer. 鈥淲hen we come together, it is very purpose driven.鈥
What people go to the office for is changing, Fisher adds. 鈥淧eople go to the office to have their human needs met, and one of those human needs 鈥 the biggest of those human needs 鈥 is human connection.鈥
Team meetings should have a robust agenda to make every moment count. Organizers should clearly communicate the intended outcomes of the meeting and participants should model high levels of engagement (put away the cell phones and keep laptops closed).
Mayer emphasizes that people expect more than a free lunch when asked to show up for a team meeting.
鈥淔ree food alone is not an incentive anymore.鈥
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