People Matters Logo

Maintaining the agility quotient during work from home

• By Anushree Sharma
Maintaining the agility quotient during work from home

Shifting to the ‘home office’ has become the new normal for many of us for a while, given the coronavirus has officially reached ‘pandemic’ status.

Companies around the globe have rolled out mandatory remote work. Google, Microsoft, Twitter. Hitachi, Apple, Amazon. Chevron, Salesforce, Spotify. From the UK to the US, Japan to South Korea, these are all global companies that have, in the last few days, rolled out mandatory work-from-home policies amid the spread of COVID-19.

The watershed has begun. Business operations today are all about continuity during a crisis or potential crisis. But are most organizations ready? Are corporate clients fully prepared to leverage flexible work as a strategic approach to mitigating risk?

While organizations have already established remote work protocols and contingency plans, they need a virtual workplace strategy to maintain their agility and productivity index high. Here are some key considerations to get moving:

Ramp up your communication plan:

Most people spend their days in close proximity to their managers, meaning communication is easy and effortless. But that’s all out the window with remote work, and communication breakdown is even more likely if your workplace isn’t used to remote working.

Make sure, your communication is not just driven by managers but all team members should be made responsible for ensuring open and consistent communication across all team members. Also, do make sure you have a strategy to resolve conflict and potential misunderstandings in an effective and timely manner.

Given the pandemic situation we are in, over-communicate since distributed working initially requires a degree of over-communication to make sure everyone is engaged.

Create successful virtual meetings

While online meetings may be a normal part of a team’s everyday workflow, these meetings are still not completely efficient and a bit of a head-scratcher. 

Focus on collaboration to avoid self-isolation

The coronavirus is pushing everyone into this kind of extreme working from home,” says Nicholas Bloom, a professor of economics at Stanford University in California who’s given TED Talks about remote work. He says there are two types of working from home: short-term or occasional work from home, and permanent or full-time work from home. “It is kind of like comparing light exercise to marathon training,” he says.

Recognize the impact of isolation and loneliness. Working remotely can cause people to feel isolated, making it more important to routinely check in with your team, not only about their work product but also to see how they are doing. Loneliness can lead to depression and other mental health issues. Be aware of significant changes you may see in your team member's personality or work product, because it may be a sign that a person is struggling.

Check in with your Employee Assistance Program (EAP) to confirm their availability and to coordinate support for employees. Remind the staff that the EAP is there if they need support and can connect employees with behavioral health support if needed. Also, connect with the organization's health plan(s) to learn what they are offering to support plan members and pass that information onto employees. Be sure to include all relevant website links and phone numbers for both the EAP and health plans in communicating with employees.

Here are some of the best practices adopted by the leading organizations to create better employee experiences for their virtual workforce: