By Vivy Chao, Recruitment and Culture Lead at Tandem
Brené Brown’s teachings are often referenced in the corporate world. They are are particularly relevant now that the world has shifted to heavily remote and hybrid work structures. Brown’s teachings revolve around how to build trust. According to her research, “Trust is built in very small moments” and not through grand, sweeping moments.
What does this even mean in a work environment; especially one where people don’t even see one another in person regularly anymore?
One major aspect of work that has changed due to not being in person regularly is the change in workplace dynamics (a.k.a. work politics). For some, working remotely means not having to deal with the same stressors of these politics that were exacerbated while in person. For others, these dynamics have merely shifted. According to the the U.S Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Negativity costs businesses $3 billion a year due to its harmful effects.”
Trust is a simple word with heavy implications in a work environment. Researcher Paul J. Zak, the founding director of the Center for Neuroeconomics Studies and a professor of economics, psychology, and management at Claremont Graduate University, derived a mathematical relationship between trust and economic performance in his studies. The results were stunning: People at high-trust companies reported 74% less stress, 106% more energy at work, 50% higher productivity, 13% fewer sick days, 76% higher engagement, and 40% less burnout.
At Tandem we’ve been experimenting with best practices in building team trust amid a pandemic so we can work better together. Here’s one way we’ve done that:
Creating personal user manuals
What are they? During team retros we spent several sessions deep diving into how we work best through writing, reading, and reflecting in small groups. These reflections centered on these areas:
Work: What has your attention today (this can be personal, work, or both)? If possible, how can we help you unblock this? It’s one thing to discuss blockers, but it’s another to get opportunities to ask for help.
Learning: What was the first thing you remember about learning that you loved? Relationship building takes time. Studies show that it takes 40-60 hours to build a casual friendship. Understanding this about a teammate gives a glimpse into what drives a teammate.
Growth & self-compassion: What is a mistake that you've made in the past that made you grow? Vulnerability is an important aspect of building trust. This straddles a fine line between oversharing and building trust for many people in a work environment. However, it’s important to note that vulnerability supports a positive team culture.
Memory: Name a place that holds a lot of meaning for you. Explain. A lot can be revealed about a person based on what the person says.
Work style: How would you like to communicate your ideas to the team? This is an overlooked area. In school, teachers spent a lot of time helping students learn through their preferred learning style. However, this becomes lost in the workplace. Understanding what one’s learning style is and what teammates’ learning styles are can greatly alleviate the pain of miscommunication. It can also elevate the quality of work.
The purpose of a personal user manual is to allow people to share clear insight into the way they operate. Imagine the amount of time, energy, and misunderstandings saved if transparency can be built early on with teammates. For example, if a teammate feels that he/she/they operate best by sharing written reflections in a shared document, then it helps the people running meetings understand how to structure those meetings for top effectiveness. Currently very little effort is spent to understand how much information is retained after meetings and what the actual ROI is with the time spent by everyone in attendance.
Tandem’s CEO, Rajiv Ayyangar, wrote extensively on psychological safety and its importance on a team. People need to feel safe in an environment in order for trust to build. Trust seeps into every single part of business as shown in a study conducted by PwC that revealed 55% of CEOs think that “a lack of trust is a threat to their organization’s growth.” At Tandem, a behavior that has become a staple of our company culture, is transparency. An example of what transparency looks like for us is being able to “sit in” on nearly all meetings. For me, as a recruiter, I feel many times more comfortable communicating with potential candidates because I have a more well-rounded view of what’s happening internally across teams. I know when a bug has been bothering multiple users and what the issue is; I know what the engineering team will be focused on next and why. This has translated into passive candidates having a better idea of what our product does, which peaked their interest.
Trust is a non-tangible feeling that sets the foundation of how people interact with one another. Therefore it is not a surprise how it affects work performance. Without trust, the business will fail.
Rajiv is the co-founder and CEO of Tandem, a virtual office for hybrid and remote teams.
“The future of work is hybrid”. You probably heard this sentence a dozen of times within the last year, and for good reason. As the pandemic starts easing down (in some parts of the world), companies are beginning to encourage their employees to come back to the office. Two factors are motivating this shift. First, research has demonstrated that in-person interactions and presence improves collaboration, team culture, productivity and gives everybody a better sense of purpose. Second, employees want to work remotely, sometimes. A McKinsey survey has recently shown that in a post-pandemic world, employees would like to be in office at least 1-2 days per week.
This new set of expectations is putting companies in a situation where they need to figure out the infrastructure, technology, and culture changes needed to transition to a hybrid work model. But in order to do that, they need to gain a thorough understanding of what hybrid work is. In my previous article on hybrid anxiety and hybrid optimism, I mentioned that the term “hybrid work” is often poorly defined. Companies (and the media) assume that is is a linear combination of remote and in-person work, however, it is more complex than that. It requires companies to shift inwards to get a comprehensive view of their workplace structure and understand where they want to take it next.
In this article, we’ll dive into the definition of hybrid work and examples of what it looks like in practice, and discuss the implications for companies and employees moving forward.
What is Hybrid Work?
It is almost easier to define what hybrid work is by looking at what it isn’t. Is your company fully-remote? Is it fully in-person? If your answer is no to both of these questions, then you are hybrid. Depending on your employees' need for flexibility, company policies, and hiring practices, hybrid work can be split into three distinct categories:
Remote + In-Person: Your company is split into full-time remote workers and full-time in-person workers.
Flexible Remote or In-Person: Your employees get to choose when to work in-person and when to work remotely. Your company doesn’t require them to be present in-person on specific days of the week.
Structured Remote or In-Person: Your employees come into the office some days of the week, and the company sets the remote/in-person work schedule (e.g., Tuesdays & Thursdays are in-person work days.)
What Does It Look Like in Practice?
It is important to acknowledge that because of the novelty of the situation, the vast majority of companies are still trying to figure out what hybrid work “looks like”. They are experimenting with different tech stacks, policies, and office layouts to determine what works best for their employees. It is too soon to determine who got it right, but here are a few promising examples of what hybrid workplaces might look like in the (very) near future.
Google unveiled its hybrid approach to work in 2021, and opted for a 3 days in-office/2 days remote work week. As soon as covid cases slow down, they believe that about 60% of their workforce will be present in-person a few days a week, 20% will move office locations and another 20% will be fully-remote. In order to accommodate the new structure, their real estate and workplace services team is testing different team spaces structure. Within other improvements, that led to the creation of the famous “Campfire” meeting pods. Additionally, the company invested in a colorful office space in London worth $1 billion, showing its faith in the future of the physical office as a hub for in-person collaboration and connection.
Other companies, like Dropbox, opted for more creative structures, to empower teams to work on their own terms. In 2020, the company unveiled “Dropbox Studios”, the intentional physical collaboration and community building spaces, and made it very clear that they cannot be used for solo work. In addition to that, Dropbox embraced “non-linear workdays” and set core collaboration hours that overlap between time zones when teams can communicate and hold meetings. The rest of the time, employees are encouraged to set their own schedules, unlocking a new level of independence and ownership.
Similarly, Spotify introduced what they called “My Work Mode”, a workplace structure that allows employees to either work full time from home, from the office, or a combination of the two. Each employee and their manager get to decide the work schedule that suits them best. The company also introduced location independence, allowing everyone to pick which country and city they want to work from (with certain limitations to address time zone difficulties and regional laws), and will go as far as supporting a co-working space membership if the employees moves to a location that isn’t near a Spotify office.
Hybrid work isn’t and shouldn’t be a “one-size fit all". It will need to be custom tailored to what your company looks like and how it operates. Some of the variables that must be factored in include: company size, workforce distribution, health and safety measures, company culture, hiring practices, cross-departmental collaboration, employee sentiment, business goals... (Stay tuned for our upcoming blog! We will take a deep dive into each one of these and how you should incorporate them in your hybrid workplace planning.)
The Implications of a Hybrid Workplace
Now that’s we’ve gone through the definition of hybrid work and real life examples, let’s look into what this shift in workplace structure means for companies and their employees:
Synchronous Communication Over Asynchronous Communication. When companies used to operate fully in-person, async communication was often paired up with synchronous communication. The hallway chat about the upcoming customer meeting, the colleague dropping by your desk to ask about the status of a project, or the manager checking in on their team in real time are all examples of the seamless interactions that got lost the second the world transitioned to remote work. Spontaneous conversions were replaced by endless email threads, slack messages and an overwhelming sense of disconnect. As you plan for the future of work, it is essential to provide a combination of async and sync communication tools to empower teams to communicate better, whether they are present in person or working remotely.
Intentional Collaboration & The “A-Ha” Moments. It’s 2018, you and your team booked a meeting room to plan for your next product launch, you spent endless hours making sure that your engineering infrastructure is flawless, that the UX/UI is up to par, and that the onboarding process is intuitive. You’re brainstorming how to introduce your product to market, and then it happens. The “A-Ha” moment you were waiting for. These magic moments don’t happen as often when teams are working remotely, and may happen even less in hybrid workplace settings if they aren’t intentionally designed to promote collaboration. Mohak Shroff, Head of Engineering at LinkedIn describes it best: “The answer is not to create more meetings or email threads, but instead to re-imagine virtual spaces that can function like the classic whiteboard and other serendipitous modes of collaboration.”
Psychological and Physical Safety. One of the biggest predictors of team effectiveness is psychological safety, and it often relies on two basic concepts: see and be seen, literally and figuratively. Employees need to have a certain level of visibility into the office, policies, and business goals and at the same time, managers need to create and environment that encourages employees to share their opinions freely and any personal information that can impact their work performance. In addition to that, companies need to, of course, be in compliance with Covid-19 health and safety regulations, occupancy limits, and implement any policies that they deem necessary to ensure that their employees feel comfortable going back to the office, in-person.
Inclusiveness & The Second Class Citizen Problem. If the transition from remote to hybrid work isn’t properly planned, companies run the risk of marginalizing their remote employees. That, in turn, can negatively impact their sense of belonging, productivity and overall trust. Workplace inclusiveness is in the details. Simple things like the communication tools you use, how critical information is shared, or whether your employees feel like they have access to their teammates no matter where they are can go a long way.
Ultimately, the companies that will thrive a post-pandemic work setting, are the ones that take the time to plan for it, in advance. Trust, inclusiveness, communication, and collaboration are all essential elements to build a company culture designed for hybrid work. And if the transition is done correctly, companies will reap the benefits across employee happiness, productivity, and innovation.
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Tandem is a virtual office for remote and hybrid teams that recreates your office environment on your desktop. Try it out with your team!
In response to the pandemic, tech companies have announced a wide range of policies concerning remote work. Apple, Facebook, Google, and Salesforce have embraced hybrid models, allowing for some remote work but requiring that all employees work from the office on certain days (or that certain employees work from the office every day). On the other hand, Coinbase, Shopify, and Twitter have declared that they’re now “remote first” or “digital by default,” even allowing employees to work from home “forever.”
At the opposite end of the spectrum are companies like Netflix, which has commented on how not being able to get together in person is a “pure negative”, and Amazon, which has said that an “office-centric culture” is their baseline. In any case, though, remote work is here to stay. I’d argue it was always here for companies at scale (those with multiple offices, traveling employees, work-from-home days, and regular offsites), but the pandemic has made it clear that, in the future, every company will be remote (at least sometimes).
As we start to go “back to the office,” it has become increasingly clear that the offices in question have changed irreversibly. Companies have shared in surveys, or stated outright, that the dominant model for the near future is hybrid work. Some fear it will be “the worst of both worlds”, but the term “hybrid work” is still poorly defined. Hybrid work isn’t a straightforward, linear combination of remote and in-person work — it is a significant evolution of the modern enterprise that asks (as former Microsoft executive Steven Sinofsky has observed): What is the structure of getting things done?
We will inevitably blend distributed work with in-person, but the details are much harder than they appear. From asymmetry of access to the challenges of establishing digital “presence” in the workplace — there are many issues, questions, and yes, anxiety around hybrid work, for both employees and company leaders. Instead of debating whether any one form of hybrid work is superior, it’s more useful to begin by tracing the evolution of remote work itself, paying particular attention to how the nature of work — with an emphasis on presence and collaboration — has been changing. These changes present greater challenges in hybrid models than in fully remote ones; overcoming them will open up a future of work that connects us seamlessly, no matter where we are.
The evolution of remote work
A year ago, remote work was for many an unfamiliar and dubious concept, but over the course of the pandemic we’ve moved from managers asking how to verify their employees are working to more productive questions (“how do we prevent burnout?”). Underpinning all this is an ongoing evolution in technologies. A brief look at the recent past helps frame where we’re going.
Remote 1.0. The first wave of modern “remote-first” companies (including Automattic, Gitlab, and Zapier) leaned heavily on asynchronous communication via tools like Google Docs and Slack. This involved a fundamental culture shift that most enterprises could not — and didn’t want to — undertake. It didn’t help that video conferencing technology was clumsy and unreliable, making frictionless real-time communication unfeasible. When collaboration happened, it was primarily through screen sharing: low-fidelity, non-interactive, ineffective. Rather than paving the way, technology was in the way.
Remote 2.0, the phase we’re in, more closely approximates in-person work by relying on video conferencing that allows real-time collaboration (albeit still with friction); video calls are much better now, thanks to more consumer-friendly tools like Zoom and Google Meet. Millennials and Gen-Z-ers, who are more comfortable with multimedia (video and audio as well as multi-player gaming), are increasingly joining the workforce. But while this phase has been more functional from a technical standpoint, it has not been pleasant: “not being able to unplug” has become the top complaint among remote workers. (Especially since many teams have tried to replicate a sense of in-person presence by scheduling more video calls, leading to “Zoom fatigue”). As context diminishes, building trust has become harder — particularly for new employees.
Remote 3.0 is the phase ahead of us: hybrid work. The same challenges of Remote 2.0 are magnified here by asymmetry. The pandemic leveled the playing field at first by pushing everyone to remote work; now that it’s feasible to work in-person, though, hybrid work will create a “second-class citizen” problem. Remote employees may find it much harder to participate in core company functions, to be included in casual conversations, and to form relationships with their colleagues.
I’ll focus primarily on technology here, and to better understand how it is entwined with these problems and shifts, let’s trace two broad tech trends: the rise of “multiplayer” mode in workplace tools and the development of a visceral sense of presence in hybrid work, and explore their impact on connection, collaboration, and trust.
The future is multiplayer
“Multiplayer” enterprise software enables real-time collaboration. In contrast to “single-player” tools like Microsoft Word and Excel, Google Docs and Google Sheets introduced workers to the power of multiplayer editing. And the ability to work on the same artifact, simultaneously, was game-changing. In “The Arc of Collaboration,” Kevin Kwok uses the example of Figma to show how this mode of collaboration isn’t merely a feature; it opens up entirely new possibilities: “Unlike Sketch or Photoshop, Figma …shows what collaboration means when you understand that collaboration is intimately part of productivity. …The feedback loops of collaboration get so short that they become part of the productivity loop.”
A consequence of this, Kwok observes, is that both work and collaboration can happen speedily and losslessly within apps, and “going to Slack is increasingly a channel of last resort.” This is the power of multiplayer: it merges collaboration and productivity by allowing us to work together within the same tools that we rely on for solo work. Such tools, however, are technologically difficult to execute, and as a result, the shift to multiplayer has occurred gradually.
The concept of multiplayer collaboration, however, has been around for a long time. See, for instance, this video from Xerox PARC in 1991 of two people drawing on the same surface from different locations. While such prototypes were arresting, practical multiplayer tools were prohibitively costly and challenging to build at scale. Fast-forward to 2006, when Google Docs innovated on operational transform algorithms (which enabled concurrent editing); it took Microsoft nearly a decade to catch up. Later, Figma spent years in stealth making multiplayer design happen in-browser through specialized data structures used in distributed systems.
Even when real-time collaboration itself is solved, multiplayer apps need to build parity with their single-player predecessors before users will consider switching (no easy feat). Despite the difficulty and the costs, though, multiplayer has arrived. Screen share is quickly becoming obsolete, replaced by multiplayer applications for documents (Google Docs, Notion), design (Figma, FigJam), and code (starting with Replit and VS Live Share). Note that there are different levels of abstraction for multiplayer mode, which can exist:
at the computer desktop layer (e.g. Zoom’s remote control function), which tends to hog bandwidth and feels clunky;
at the native application layer (e.g. Google Docs, Figma), where the application itself implements collaborative editing;
at a virtualized layer, which remains largely hypothetical, but if users are willing to switch to using a virtual computer like Parsec (or new virtual browsers like Mighty), these could enable smooth multi-user control.
For now, it’s difficult to achieve the requisite speed and fluidity without integrating multiplayer at the application layer. To do multiplayer well, certain processes must be fast (e.g. drawing curves together), while others can be slower (e.g., commenting); those tradeoffs are currently best made by the application itself. The takeaway here is that multiplayer is not simple or easy, but it’s worth the effort, and there’s a lot of very impressive innovation happening right now. It will only get better.
So if every app becomes multiplayer, what does that mean for the future of work? The adoption of multiplayer apps has two very significant consequences:
First, multiplayer apps contribute considerably to a team’s sense of presence and personal connection: you’re less likely to feel isolated when you can see everyone else’s cursor, for instance. (I also think of cursors like digital index fingers, not just pointing at things but also offering a sense of where my gaze is; my collaborators are personified for me through their own cursors, and the result feels remarkably alive. Such user interfaces help you “think” with your hands). Through modern interfaces like these, the feeling of working together in real time can approach that of an online game; in fact, consumer gaming mechanics now permeate many enterprise multiplayer apps.
Second, multiplayer apps can make hybrid collaboration practically frictionless. Teams use tools like Figma and Google Docs to collaborate digitally, even when they’re in the same physical space. So when remote team members are added, the lines separating them from their in-office coworkers become blurred. In a hybrid world, this is invaluable.
Making presence work
Multiplayer apps can provide a sense of presence, which is an intuitive awareness of your teammates’ activity and availability in real time. Presence, however, is not limited to multiplayer mode. Social Presence Theory, which emerged as a field of research in the 1970s, studies the depth of awareness people have of one another during communication in different media; in this context, “presence” has largely focused on the differences between face-to-face and telephone communication. In virtual reality, presence has long been discussed as a term of art — the holy grail, where the user’s awareness of the technology fades away to produce a seemingly real, complete immersion in a virtual world.
In the context of the workplace, presence isn’t about equating to reality; it’s what gives you that familiar sense of your team’s natural choreography, rhythm, and pulse. This isn’t just about explicit alerts or signals; it’s about tacit stories: when I see two colleagues chatting in front of a whiteboard, I know they’re brainstorming (and that I can drop in). When I see that Vivy and Ram are still talking in a meeting room, I understand why Vivy’s late to our one-on-one. When I turn around and see Vera wearing headphones and writing code, workplace presence lets me know that I need to wait to ask her my question.
Presence is essential to hybrid work. It still has a long way to go: For several years running, “loneliness” and “communication” — two problems that presence directly addresses — have been the top two concerns for remote workers in Buffer’s annual survey. In Remote 1.0, we relied on chat, and while chat tools like Slack offer an approximation of presence (a custom status, a green dot), in practice, people are always online and reachable for the purposes of asynchronous messaging. I’m still going to Slack you if your status is marked grey (“away”), because I know that you’ll get it eventually. Presence is effectively meaningless in this model, since workers are both always online and never really fully available; as a result, it’s very difficult to feel connected with your team, and it’s harder to disconnect from work.
In Remote 2.0, a new wave of tools are incorporating signals that nuance presence beyond simply “in the office”, “at work”, “online”, “disconnected”, and so on. We’ve seen the rise of “proximity chat” apps and virtual offices that are richer in presence than their conference-call predecessors.
There are some key technological considerations and upcoming shifts to keep in mind when it comes to building digital presence:
Sense of place. Presence in the workplace requires constructing a virtual, “third” place — a sense of proximity to your teammates, and of belonging. Discord does this well; it has evolved to be more than an app or a communication tool, and is now effectively a place where users hang out with their friends.
Always-on as an enabling condition for interaction. While tools in Remote 2.0 have tended to gravitate either toward onerous “always-on” efforts (extended Zoom calls) or the now-meaningless status signals described earlier, Remote 3.0 offers more lightweight ways to engage. Discord, again, can be instructive: Kwok observes that active users of the platform tend to have it on all the time — even when they’re not playing games — because “it’s a passive way to have presence with your friends.” Yet it’s not onerous (like an extended conference call), and it allows more people to easily join in, amplifying the social aspect of multiplayer mode (something else that the workplace can learn from the gaming world).
AI video compression. Driven by an increasingly global workforce and need for ever-larger group video calls, there’s massive pressure to improve video compression codecs to be more efficient in low-bandwidth networks. The search for efficiency will soon reach its natural encoding limit: encoding not images of our faces, but instead our facial expressions themselves (like a Memoji FaceTime or deepfake, but of your own face). While there’s still an uncanny valley to cross here, several efforts (Nvidia’s Maxine, and others among them) are getting close. This opens up some strange new possibilities: We’ll be able to easily alter our appearances; we’ll have crisp video chat even in the worst network conditions (AI compression can reduce bandwidth by orders of magnitude); and without requiring a video camera, AI could construct a facial expression based on just your tone of voice. Our conception of presence will change in unexpected ways as these technologies advance.
For hybrid presence to be seamless, though, a number of questions remain. Who’s at home, but available? If you’re in a remote conversation, how can you include people in the physical office? Conversely, if you start a water cooler chat in the office, how can you include remote teammates? Crucially, how do we create presence while still respecting privacy? As our conception and technologies of the workplace evolve, it will unlock a rich repertoire of natural, real-time interactions — which will in turn dramatically increase real-time collaboration and productivity within hybrid offices. The future is synchronous.
The future is not asynchronous
For some tech insiders, strictly asynchronous work — adopting processes and documentation practices to minimize or eliminate real-time communication altogether — is, apparently, appealing. As mentioned earlier, though, going fully asynchronous was a cultural shift that hardly any enterprises successfully pulled off. I don’t believe it was ever going to work: We’re social creatures who build trust through talking (more on this later), and, frankly, the preference for asynchronous work was likely an effect of the clunky and unreliable Remote 1.0 tools we had, rather than the intent.
COVID-19 seems to have settled this debate: When the pandemic hit, remote work was already starting to incorporate more synchronous communication, in part due to improvements in audio-video technology and the rise of multiplayer apps. The trend in the past year has been not to abandon synchronous communication, but to rely on it far more.
And hybrid work, of course, depends on synchronicity; in making the transition, though, we will need to incorporate some useful elements from asynchronous-first models.
One argument in favor of asynchronous work is that it facilitates the kinds of concentrated, independent work essential for developers and other information workers. See, for example, the classic Maker vs. Manager-dilemma, which argues for a clear separation between the two schedules and modes, and the need for big chunks of time without context-switching.
The reality is that most high-performing teams need to compromise between the Maker’s and the Manager’s schedules, blending synchronous and asynchronous modes in the service of speed, alignment, and creativity. In a 2016 study, Christoph Riedl and Anita Williams Woolley characterized the optimal communication cadence for creativity and execution as “bursty” (a mixture of rapid communication and uninterrupted, independent work). In a randomized, controlled trial of 52 software teams, they found that bursty communication was used by the most productive teams and tended to “lead to better outcomes”. Riedl and Woolley observed: “People often think that constant communication is most effective, but actually, we find that bursts of rapid communication, followed by longer periods of silence, are telltale signs of successful teams.”
A useful analogy here: if we think about the enterprise as a living organism, good asynchronous practices (e.g. documentation, project management, Slack etiquette) are like long-term memory — necessary for order and consistency; synchronous practices (e.g. voice and video calls, real-time collaboration) are like the central nervous system — vital for speed and creativity. Both are essential.
Trust is everything
Synchronous communication builds trust, and trust is speed. This is the best lens through which to understand organizational dynamics in a hybrid model.
In “Being there versus seeing there: Trust via video” (2001), researchers at the University of Michigan showed how group trust builds over time, as measured by mean payoff in a social dilemma game. Note that audio and video reached in-person (face-to-face) levels of trust, whereas chat never did:
Psychological safety, loosely understood as “group trust”, is the best-studied social dynamic of effective teams. Coined by Amy Edmondson of Harvard Business School, this phenomenon has been extensively studied by Google, which found it to be the key factor in team productivity, as it creates an environment in which teammates can speak their minds without fear of backlash.
High-trust environments are essential to the success of the hybrid office; the hybrid office, however, presents unique challenges to building trust. While there’s every indication that trust can successfully be built remotely, those in the physical office are likely to build trust faster than their remote counterparts. Again, this asymmetry — and the anxiety it will create for those working remotely — is one of the many hurdles hybrid work will need to clear as it moves forward.
Hybrid work in the future
To take a quick pulse check on where we are, in terms of technology readiness, on hybrid work: Some challenges, like mechanical issues such as how to have hybrid calls, will be worked out quickly. The problems posed by planning workforce capacity, building a hybrid team presence, unlocking hybrid water cooler conversations, and avoiding the “second-class citizen” problem have solutions underway, but will take a little longer to be broadly resolved.
And there are plenty of new technologies on the horizon, but we aren’t sure how they’ll play out. Consider VR, for instance: will it take virtual collaboration to the next level? While initial efforts, such as Spatial, are promising, in general we don’t like to collaborate on platforms that we don’t also use for single-player work. Similar to how Figma’s success hinged on designers living in Figma, regardless of whether they were collaborating or not, VR’s success depends on whether we’ll do work in VR by default. This remains to be seen.
Leaving aside collaboration to focus on interpersonal connection, is there a ceiling on how much we’re willing to connect in a virtual setting? If there is, technology may already be pushing it: the Japanese company Tonari is creating a virtual wall across which you can wave, make eye contact, and have a natural conversation; Google’s Project Starline is a “magic window” that uses computer graphics to create eye contact for greater presence. Will we see these efforts as enriching our interpersonal bandwidth, or will they go down as skeuomorphic archaisms, replaced by new and better forms of connecting?
To date, much of what companies have focused on when it comes to technology for interpersonal connection is what we could term “collaborative bandwidth”: the speed, quality, and effectiveness of doing work together. Along the way, however, we’ve gained more “interpersonal bandwidth”, which enables us to feel connected and forge stronger relationships. We might measure interpersonal bandwidth by how quickly we build trust — getting back to the idea of “being there” vs. “seeing there” — and this, again, is where the richness of the communication channel matters. Factors like eye contact, latency, audio, and perhaps even touch will be essential.
While the fine details may still be fuzzy, we can sketch in broad strokes what a successful hybrid office will look like: Those workers who are remote will have access to the flow of in-person collaboration; you’ll look back on your last meeting, collaboration session, or spontaneous conversation, and not be able to recall which teammates were in the office and which were not.
Of course, the office itself — an artifact formed in a very different, factory-focused era — will change: It will become more of a gathering place or creative studio than a 9-to-5 obligation. The office of the future will be re-imagined around what in-person work is best for. There will certainly be many misguided and costly experiments that build unnecessary “remote-friendly” office features in this hybrid adjustment phase, but ultimately, we’ll end up in a better place.
As virtual and physical offices merge, one thing is for sure: freedom and flexibility for knowledge workers will improve, even as we overcome other cultural challenges along the way. We’ll get closer to the vision of being able to work from anywhere, in the fullest sense of the word “work” — not just contributing individually, but also collaborating, leading, creating, connecting, including, and being included
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Tandem is a virtual office for remote and hybrid teams that recreates your office environment on your desktop. Try it out with your team!