I think we can officially say we have entered the after-COVID stage in almost every area of life. From shopping to restaurants, people have returned to a new - or at least what we have all decided is the new normal in our public spaces.
However, one area of our lives where this is still taking shape is in the office. While many people have been "back to work" (in the office), many others have remained remote or hybrid. In fact, numerous companies sent their employees home permanently, finding that the cost of an office wasn't justified when studies have shown that productivity was up 13%.
Today, we are finding that 81% of executives are open to a flexible work week, and 61% of workers work from home as a choice. With that, the idea of "the office" is clearly in flux. Gone are the days when workers would accept a prison block of cubicles as their workspace. However, in a similar trend, the days of open office experiments are also past. We've tried to scrape maximum productivity out through the blinders of cubicles and attempted to leverage a wall-less community with the free-flowing open office. Both models have now been exposed for their weaknesses. In the after-COVID office environment, the needs of the dynamic workforce are taking center stage. The result is a flexible office environment, connected and centered around the employee - acting as a resource hub for the modern hybrid worker.
Increasingly the office is viewed as a place to go for the benefits it provides the workers - community, collaboration, technology, etc. With that, an "office" will always be needed. It just may not be required for every worker eight hours a day, five days a week. As workers, this is excellent news - on average, employees are recapturing forty minutes a day just by eliminating commuting from their lives. We're finding more productivity, free time, and contentment in our work lives, and our companies benefit from the change.
This is a win-win for everyone.
Now, stepping into this post-COVID office space as a leader looking to remodel your office space could present quite a few challenges. Keeping some of the lessons learned in mind, we can successfully design office spaces that meet various needs while empowering and supporting our teams to reach their goals. As you make plans to bring workers back (or not) and relaunch your office - there are a collection of office space archetypes that will help create an environment that meets the various needs of your modern workforce:
Using these office space archetypes as a guide to building your next office space will provide your workers with an office designed around their needs. Supporting your team while increasing productivity, collaboration, and community.