How to Make Your Hybrid Workplace More Efficient in 2024

Originally published on Inc. December 27, 2023 | Read the original post

When it comes to workplaces, the new normal is hybrid.

In the U.S.,62 percent of companies now allow some degree of remote work, up from 51 percent at the start of the year, according to recent data from the hybrid work software company Scoop Technologies. On average, companies require two to three days of in-person work per week, which workers seem to prefer. Research from Harvard Business School found that employees who spent two days a week at the office reported “greater work-life balance, more job satisfaction, and lower isolation from colleagues.”

Read the full post on inc.com.

Winning Together from Afar: How To Achieve Goals through Remote & Async Collaboration

Originally published on Flex Index November 30, 2023 | Read the original post

Hybrid and fully remote work is not new, but it is at this scale – and is a big change for many people. Until recently, hybrid work was most commonly found in project-based companies (e.g., consulting firms). The pandemic catapulted flexibility, particularly in terms of time and location, into one of the most critical factors for whether individuals choose to join or remain with an organization.

Mastering asynchronous collaboration is a game-changer for flexible work. In the current landscape, where work transcends traditional boundaries, the ability to collaborate asynchronously can offer unparalleled flexibility and efficiency. It’s not merely a matter of working remotely; it’s about harnessing the power of asynchronous communication to accomplish tasks, make decisions, and drive projects forward effectively.

This shift from traditional norms is vital for organizations. They must acknowledge that choosing between synchronous and asynchronous collaboration, as well as in-person and remote work, should be tailored to the specific needs of the work at hand, whether it’s for an individual, a team, or a given day.

Instead of relying on the oversimplified assumption that effective collaboration must be in person, we’ll explore four key strategies for optimizing collaboration within a flexible working model.

4 Strategies for Optimizing Collaboration in a Flexible Work Environment

Step 1: Set Up Guiding Principles and Norms

One of the biggest barriers to effective hybrid work is a lack of alignment on expectations. For example, the CEO gets frustrated that no one showed up to the exec meeting in person. Or a manager shows up to the office only to be on Zoom meetings all day.

Aligning guiding principles at an organizational level – and norms at a team level – helps alleviate some of the frustration and misunderstanding. Norms to discuss as a team may include:

  • When are we expected to be available (core hours or other)?
  • When are we expected to be together vs remote (types of activities, not specific days)?
  • How do we signal to others when we’re remote vs. onsite?

Then, implementing tactics that reinforce these norms helps to build sustainable habits. For example, don’t put a Zoom link in the invite when everyone is expected to be at a meeting in person. If someone needs an exception (we’ve always had exceptions), they can ask for one, and the moderator can use their discretion on whether to allow it.

Step 2: Break Down the Work or Project into Sub-Components

Just because a project is collaborative doesn’t mean it has to be accomplished synchronously. Breaking down work into sub-components is a crucial step as it allows for a more nuanced understanding of the tasks involved, facilitating a targeted approach to each aspect of the project. Not only does this enhance clarity, but it also enables a more efficient allocation of resources and a better grasp of the specific requirements at each stage.

Consider the following sub-components of project work:

  • Meetings (e.g., status meetings, final presentations, stakeholder management)
  • Research (e.g., primary, secondary)
  • Analysis (e.g., collaborative, independent)
  • Execution (collaborative or independent)

This will better inform times when the work is best suited for sync / async and together / remote collaboration.

Step 3: Determine When to be Together and When Not

In his book Remote not Distant, Gustavo Razzetti describes six working modes that can be considered along two dimensions: “Me versus we time” and “deep versus shallow work.” This framework reinforces the need to break down collaborative work into sub-components to think through how best to approach it.

In any collaborative team, there are activities that fall within each quadrant. It has been shown that in-person, synchronous time is best suited for building relationships and deep collaboration (i.e. working together on a time-sensitive and/or challenging problem). Whereas asynchronous, remote time is best for “heads-down” independent work and to mitigate groupthink.

For example, the most effective workshops I have led have had a mix of (1) asynchronous and remote, (2) synchronous and remote, and (3) synchronous and in-person components. We leverage asynchronous and remote tools to disseminate information (“pre-reads”) and gather participants’ data in advance. We leverage synchronous and in-person meetings to discuss key themes, check on/improve alignment, and build relationships. The sub-component of the work/project drives location and timing versus a random day of the week.

Step 4: Utilize In-Person Time to Build Relationships for Enhanced Asynchronous/Remote Work Efficiency

It’s amazing how a little bit of in-person time can go a long way, but it needs to be managed deliberately. Don’t waste in-person time on one-directional information sharing or, even worse, back-to-back Zoom calls. Design in-person days/meetings so that relationship-building is a key objective. Treat in-person time as a booster to make async work even better – building trust and understanding. This may mean less content sharing and more white space for checking in and getting to know one another. Otherwise, opt for a fully remote meeting or an asynchronous interaction (email or other).

Conclusion

Changing the way we work is hard. We all need to embrace a growth mindset and acknowledge when there are opportunities to change tack.

Don’t jump to in-person and synchronous every time you hear the word “collaboration!” If we think about our experiences of failed collaborations, we will likely discover that location or schedule was not the culprit. Setting up shared outcomes, guiding principles, norms (including where and when work gets done), taking full advantage of together time when it occurs, and regular iteration and communication improve the chances of success.

Ambition can get a bad rap. Here’s how to keep it in check to drive sustainable outcomes

Originally published in the Globe & Mail August 30, 2023 | Read the original post

Ambition has become a polarizing word. On one end, an espoused corporate value, touted by CEOs in earnings calls and town hall meetings to satisfy shareholders and motivate workers. On the other end, it is associated with a hard-charging culture (or leader) with little regard for worker or customer well-being.

While ambition can go terribly wrong and lead to devastating outcomes (think Enron, Theranos or FTX), as Russell Raath, founder of The Ambition Company puts it, ambition is the requisite energy to turn a vision into results.

One of the dictionary definitions of ambition is “desire and determination to achieve success.” However, how we each define success is personal – thus, ambition doesn’t necessarily mean striving for bigger or better, one can have ambition to live a happy and comfortable life. My current ambition is to enjoy the fleeting summer days. Ambition is being deliberate about a desired outcome and going after it.

Specifically, on a recent episode of the foHRsight podcast, Mr. Raath shared three key ingredients to drive ambition:

  1. Unshakable confidence: Ambitious leaders are fully committed to and confident in the vision. What will be achieved is clear to them and they are able to articulate it to their teams in a compelling way. Mr. Raath refers to U.S. President John F. Kennedy’s moonshot speech as an example of unshakable confidence: prior to 1969, no one had gone to the moon, Mr. Kennedy didn’t know how it would be accomplished but, in his 1962 speech at Rice University, he got not only a nation but the whole world rallied behind the ambition of making it happen.
  2. Competitive energy: Ambitious leaders trust in and empower their teams to figure out how to achieve their goal, and then guide them with competitive energy – the spark between confidence and action. Ambitious leaders balance unshakable confidence with humility that they don’t have all the answers. They acknowledge that while conditions may not always be favourable, their team has the collective power to achieve their goal and they coach them toward it while not getting in the way.
  3. Focused action: Ambitious leaders “walk the talk” – it is not enough to have a vision, confidence and competitive energy, they must take swift, decisive action. This means allocating resources (for example, money, headcount or effort) where they are needed, and potentially cutting from where they are not, to achieve the goal. Otherwise, people get frustrated and lose momentum if they don’t see progress.

But what happens when these three ingredients are combined, baked and left to rise without limits? Corporate values are critical for ambition to deliver desired outcomes, while mitigating collateral damage. And while most organizations have a set of values, they are not always authentic or consistently lived. Values need to be reinforced through culture and leadership action – what gets recognized, rewarded and penalized – especially when times are challenging. The trouble is, in many cases, corporate values are either too broad or too numerous and not considered adequately when tough decisions need to be made.

There may also be inherent conflict in values, such as collaboration or inclusion, which can slow decisions and hamper ambition, at least in the short term. Knowing “at what cost” is a critical consideration of the ambition equation. Establishing guardrails needed to honour values and testing them through different scenarios, helps to drive healthier ambition. The companies mentioned above undoubtedly had espoused values written on their proverbial wall, however, when push came to shove, they did not matter (or at least not enough), and greed won.

There is nothing wrong with aspiring to be the best at what we do or to gain a certain percentage of market share from our competitors – ambition is an important corporate value, needed to innovate and achieve greatness. But it needs to be balanced with other core values for healthier, more sustainable outcomes.