With vaccines rolling out, employees are moving back into traditional offices, but things aren’t going to be the same. This is the perfect time to review whether your office is set up in a way that fosters creativity and collaboration and makes the most of that face-to-face time employees have been missing during the last year.
Research has shown that the most important interactions at the office don’t actually occur in meetings, but rather between them. The informal interactions employees have when they chat in the halls or meet up at the coffee maker are where ties are made and collaboration across functions begins. It is therefore important to set up your office in a way that fosters these interactions and gets employees working creatively together.
The office of the next decade will be used as more of a culture space, where employees can meet to share ideas in a casual and comfortable office. To assess your space ask yourself these questions:
- Are there plenty of spaces where employees who don’t normally work together might bump into one another and strike up a conversation?
- Does the office have an effective balance between openness and privacy?
- Are managers encouraging employees to stop and get to know each other informally both through their actions and words?
- Is the office designed with acoustics in mind, so people can talk freely, but still have a degree of privacy?
Once everyone understands the office should be used as a space for connecting and building culture, the creativity and productivity is free to flow.