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Working From Home: Was I looking at it all wrong?

June 12, 2020 by Jack Smith

Over the last several years, work from home (WFH) has been a significant discussion topic in my line of work. Today, it’s front and center. The current state of affairs has allowed me to reframe how I view it: I realized that I was looking at the issue from a narrow perspective, how it benefits the employee.

Most of my conversations with candidates included a portion devoted to WFH. Without prompt, many people volunteer that they are willing to take a lateral move, and in many cases consider a step down financially for the opportunity to work from home on a regular basis. It’s come up so often in conversation that I started posing the question to everyone: candidates, hiring managers, talent acquisition and HR professionals: “How do you value WFH”? I wanted to know what people thought based on the value they assigned to it.

Based on many of those conversations, I realized ‘work from home’ had developed a deeply negative connotation for many employees. It seems to have mostly fallen short of expectations. At best, it is a privilege that allows limited flexibility.  At worst, it’s a litmus test to prove employee loyalty by eschewing the time. Conceptually, it makes sense. However, in practice, WFH is misunderstood and applied poorly. It becomes more risk than benefit to most.

My perspective needed to shift.
Jack Dorsey, CEO, announced that Twitter and Square employees (with the exception of those whose roles necessitated a physical presence in order to do the job) could work from home in perpetuity. It will be the employee’s choice. One end of the spectrum.

Satya Nadella, Microsoft CEO, warns that permanent WFH could lead to long term mental health issues due to lack of personal connectedness. And may also lead to loss of serendipity leading to ideation around the water cooler. The other end of the spectrum?

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook CEO, believes that 50% of his employees could be working from home permanently. And, he thinks WFH compensation may be based on geographic location (and the associated cost of living in a specific area). Somewhere in between.

Every company will need to do their own assessments. This is what prompted me to think about the issue differently.

Let’s ask a slightly different question: Does WFH provide real value?Looking at it through an outcome-based lens, there is indeed room for making an argument for reassessing WFH. Imagine the change in value using just three variables:

Time
But not just more time. In my conversations and online discussions, many pointed to the absence of a commute, for example. But it is not just skipping the need to prepare for getting into a car or train. It’s the ability to slow down a bit, to pause, that is helping. It’s the quality of time people get back.

Because this way, time becomes an ally and not an adversary to get in front of and fight against all day. The mental lift of not having to rush through the day is a liberating. I believe it leads to greater focus on the work tasks. And, it generally allows employees to make more time to work, more than they have ‘at the office’.

Quality of Life
This is another overused and somewhat misunderstood concept. But everyone mentions it when they talk about their job—positively or negatively. Having the flexibility to do certain tasks at a time that suits you a bit better during the course of a day is meaningful.

Playing with a child or walking your dog and being able to interact and be ‘in the moment’, these are all forms of momentary pause that create a powerful feeling of connection. This feeling leads to a greater sense of loyalty. Do you know anything that could be better for employee retention?

Personal Rhythms
Everyone is different. We all work at a different pace, have our own cycles of productivity and are affected differently by stimuli (or lack of) each and every day. The ability to work nonstop when in the zone or having a sense of ease at taking a power nap mid-afternoon are meaningful to improve energy levels and satisfaction. Employers call them– luxuries. Indeed, they are. But not in the direction of slack, quite the opposite. Don’t employers want the best effort, and greatest output from employees?

Other Potential Tradeoffs
Does working from home mean we lose the chance spark of an impromptu meeting yielding a corporate breakthrough? I guess… Do people lose serendipity? Somewhat… Is there a chance mental health issues can arise for some individuals? Most Probably… Developing a sense of intuition is a challenge in digital. Reading people and inspiring ideas seems more related to proximity and connectedness. On the whole, however, it seems the positives outweigh the negatives.

Should we then be paying more for employees working from home rather than less?
Given the angle of focus right now, it seems ( at least for the moment) that people can be more productive when working from home. And, if the productivity levels rise, should the compensation go up as well? It makes sense that we should discuss and evaluate WFH from this angle.

What’s the value of WFH and to whom?
That’s the question behind the question, isn’t it? I cannot answer that alone, at least, not now. But one of the positive outcomes of this pandemic is that it is providing us with areal time laboratory to test ideas. People and (hopefully) companies are engaged in ongoing experiments.

The WFH questions will find answers at both macro and micro levels. Every company already has the opportunity to collect its own data, explore options and develop insights. There’ll be no excuses post lockdown. Each company has the opportunity to be different. It’ll be interesting to see how WFH evolves: in policy, guidelines and results.

Afterall, we are in a Liminal Space. This is where all transformation takes place, if we learn to wait and let it inform us. 

Filed Under: Advertising, work life, Working from home

Suddenly, All is Liminal.

April 14, 2020 by Jack Smith

There has always been a special group of people in my professional life–those in near orbit that provide counsel and afford access to their experiences. These professionals come from a myriad of backgrounds and industries; all are senior-level leaders. They are generous with time because they care, not just about me (which they absolutely do) but they care about people, about the way business should be done, about how decisions are made and all without ego or pride of authorship. This is a special group of human beings.

I realized that this group of people should be brought together—given form and purpose. I wasn’t quite sure how, nor exactly why, I just knew they possessed the wisdom and experience to provide guidance to others who found themselves in critical situations that call for objective viewpoints and honest assessments.

There are commonalities rampant throughout this group:

·     an affinity for things that matter,

·     empathy for people and important causes,

·     a commitment towards doing things the right way—the first time,

·     an innate drive to work towards meaningful change,

·     an understanding that wisdom comes from experience and is evidenced by scar-tissue and wanting to make business better.

This group’s strength comes from diversity of experience and mindset, coupled with deep operational experience and high emotional intelligence.

So, we became a thing.

Truth is, we were just getting started at that point—discussing the big things we could help others accomplish, where we thought fundamental business problems lived, industries, leadership challenges, true innovation and ultimately real disruption….we needed to understand where we could be truly impactful. It was clear from the get-go that the group had a thirst to do meaningful things.

The focus became identifying monumental challenges: Companies at pivotal moments in their history, facing massive change and not quite sure how to respond.  Companies held in place by fear because of circumstances beyond their control. Industries on the cusp of sea change because of outside forces.

We started organizing our thinking and taking stock of the accumulated experiences and skillsets in our midst. What if we could help companies find the opportunity in those times of profound change and take control of their own destiny?

We realized we had to focus our attention on that place that was filled with insights and possibilities that (almost) never gets discussed in the course of normal business. A space between what “had been” and what would “be next”.  A place of transition, waiting and not knowing. This is where true transformation takes place if we learn to wait and let it inform us. We know Liminal Space, we’ve lived it, personally and professionally. It is where we are called to be.

Then, this pandemic happened.

“Suddenly, all is Liminal”. It’s a profound statement, and here we are. As a planet, a country, a state, a business, an individual and as a community. We find ourselves overwhelmed by it all. We find ourselves seeking guidance, as we wade into uncharted territory.

The decision made itself—and became a massive aspiration! We want to help the world change…for the better. What if at moments when whole industries are forced to stop, your company could use those gaps to go from “what is” to the opportunities that might be “next”? To evolve your business, grow your mission, rebrand your message, intimately engage your customers….identify those things you want to make better about your company and change course to a more successful path. Take initiative and truly lead.  

Our mission is not to foster incremental change, nor increase the bottom line a few basis points, nor bring new short term efficiencies.

Our mission is to guide to profound, profitable business change.

We are Liminal Consulting.

Filed Under: Advertising, Clients, Consulting

Working From Home- Staying Sane & Productive

March 13, 2020 by Beth Zech

With everything going on we know companies are moving towards having employees work from home for the next couple weeks. We have experience in working from home (We work remotely and have meeting spaces for our meetings in person) and there are some positives and challenges in being productive (and staying sane).

Some Great Articles on best ways to work from home:

https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/12/success/work-from-home-tips/index.html

https://www.fastcompany.com/90476020/working-from-home-7-smart-tips-to-help-you-get-more-done

https://media.qualifi.works/media/productivity_and_empathy

https://time.com/5801725/work-from-home-remote-tips/

https://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/11-best-productivity-tips-for-working-from-home.html

https://time.com/5801725/work-from-home-remote-tips/

We are here to support and listen. Feel free to schedule a call our Director of Recruiting Beth Here: https://meetings.hubspot.com/beth59

Filed Under: Advertising, Career, Clients, Human Resources

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