Tuesday, January 21 2025

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NEWS

NEWS

Workers Want to Design Hybrid Role

A recent survey by Gartner, Inc. found that 77 per cent of digital workers want to participate in creating their hybrid work model, while 14 per cent prefer to have their hybrid work environment mandated.

“One of the biggest challenges to hybrid work is the lack of alignment between the variability between what workers want and the predictability organisations, managers and workers need to be effective,” said Caitlin Duffy, director in the Gartner HR practice. “As employee wants and needs have shifted, organisations must respond thoughtfully in order to maintain productivity and avoid attrition.”

Gartner’s fifth biannual Digital Worker Experience survey was conducted from September through November 2022 among 4,861 full-time employees that use digital technology for work purposes, at organisations with 100 or more employees in the U.S., U.K., India and China.

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Hybrid Meetings Are Both Unproductive and Unpopular

Nearly half of digital workers surveyed by Gartner (47 per cent) shared that they preferred to spend the highest percentage of time in virtual meetings, with audio and/or video, and the lowest percentage of time in hybrid meetings where some attendees participate in an in-person group setting and others join via webcam or phone. Respondents ranked hybrid meetings as second-least productive (17 per cent), with audio-only meetings least, and in-person meetings as the most productive (46 per cent).

Digital workplace leaders can facilitate productivity, and improve user experience, during hybrid meetings by ensuring all participants can see and hear everyone clearly; interact with in-meeting content sharing and conversation; join the meeting with only one button or link; and seamlessly move across operating systems and devices.

“In addition to improving hybrid meetings, leaders and managers should assess the meeting culture in their organisation and ensure an intentional mix of asynchronous and synchronous work,” said Duffy.

Many organisations have implemented employee productivity monitoring as a means to understand what workers are doing in a less visible hybrid work environment. When utilised due to mistrust, employee monitoring systems seek to determine if employees are active on devices and in applications, or whether employees are attending the office as mandated.

At the highest level of trust, employee monitoring efforts help managers see which employees are most productive and why, or whether business outcomes are being met. In this scenario, 96 per cent of employees are more willing to accept monitoring if it leads to assistance that benefits them:

  • One-third of digital workers would accept monitoring in exchange for support in finding information or data to do their job.
  • Thirty percent of digital workers would accept monitoring in exchange for proactive outreach from support.
  • Twenty-eight percent of digital workers would accept monitoring in exchange for streamlining information and notifications as well as getting advice on performance improvement.

“Progressive organizations are pursuing radical transparency around when data is being collected, what data is collected, how long it’s kept, who has access to it, and for what purpose it is being collected,” said Tori Paulman, senior director analyst at Gartner. “This includes giving employees an opportunity to opt-in to information and data gathering.”

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Newsdesk
The Global Recruiter Newsdesk bringing you balanced journalism, accuracy, news and features for all involved in the business of recruitment from around the world
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