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By Stacey Farooqui, Marketing Manager at We Are Working

Many businesses are now looking ahead to a world beyond the COVID-19 pandemic and laying the groundwork for their workforce strategy. While we are advocates for a remote-first staffing strategy, we realize that can mean different things depending upon each client’s unique operational structure. We recently asked a group of business leaders to share their thoughts on how they are planning to run their business as vaccines become more readily available throughout the world. Common themes emerged, and it is clear that while many will remain fully remote, others will adopt a hybrid workforce strategy. There are several strategies for adopting a hybrid workforce model.

Strategy 1 – Staggered Work Schedules

While there are strategies for monitoring your remote workforce’s performance, sometimes business leaders and employees prefer to have some time in the office. Sometimes the organization has established a culture that is reliant on face-to-face communication. And sometimes everyone is happy with maintaining agreed-upon safety protocols in the next phase of reopening. While this can be a cost-intensive option, there are smart and responsible ways to offer and manage a staggered work schedule for employees. In this scenario, everyone works part of the week at home and the other part of the week in the office.

Strategy 2 – Role-Based Hybrid Workforce

While staggered work schedules is a great hybrid workforce strategy, it just can’t work for all roles. Some roles require physical work that simply can not be replicated in a remote work environment. In a warehouse or manufacturing plant, the staff responsible for interacting with the physical items, such as inventory and machinery, simply can’t remain at home and do that job. However, there are other roles, like those responsible for customer service chat on an e-commerce site to assist customers who want to buy those items being manufactured and warehoused, who can very easily remain at home and do their job well – perhaps even better than when in-office. This strategy evaluates each role and determines if it is suitable for working remotely. If not, then the person in that role is required to work in-person. This also helps those employees with physical jobs have fewer points of possible contact with COVID-19 and makes it easier to maintain physical distance from other employees.

Strategy 3 – Department-Based Hybrid Workforce

Similar to the role-based hybrid workforce strategy, the department-based strategy evaluates which departments are best suited for working from home or in-person for the long term. This is a simpler approach than the role-based approach since it requires evaluation of the department as a whole, and not down to each and every team member. This can also alleviate any potential HR issues. How so? Viewing the department as a whole can help ensure staff members don’t feel singled out or unfairly categorized for a non-preferred work environment situation.

Strategy 4 – Location-Based Hybrid Workforce

Perhaps, prior to the pandemic, your business was structured with multiple locations. And perhaps those locations were selected and structured based on job roles and departments. Great! Another strategy to consider is a location-based hybrid workforce. Perhaps you grow flowers and everyone in the nursery location has to show up in order to tend to the flowers, while everyone at the office location is busy with online salesdigital marketing, and bookkeeping; so that location can go fully remote. Whatever the case, a location-based hybrid workforce strategy can still pose situations where you may need to rethink how business functions are done in person. Proper precautions will need to be taken if the same pre-pandemic staff numbers are inside a physical location together, so plan well for health and safety if you have this option on the table.

Strategy 5 – Employee Choice of In-Office or Work from Home

While some businesses opt for expensive third-party consultants to swoop in and reshape their organization, who better to consult on your workforce strategy than your own employees? Many businesses had the luxury to go fully remote during COVID-19 lockdowns. However, they may have employees with a mix of personalities (Guy who made the two-hour-long office rounds every morning, we are looking at you!), homelife situations (If someone has six kids, four pets and their mother-in-law living with them, can you really blame them for wanting to be in the office? Talk about a Calgon moment!) and opinions (“This is the way our business has always run in the past, why change it?”) on the best work location for themselves. One way to certainly make everyone happy is to ask your employees. Develop a simple survey and have them choose if they will continue to work from home or return to the office. A bonus is that you can probably count on enough employees staying remote that you will be able to cut costs significantly on rent once your current lease is up.

Which hybrid workforce strategy do you feel best fits your business’s unique needs? While these all fall under the umbrella of a remote-first strategy, they all post their own unique challenges of running two strategies in parallel. Of course, our favorite remote-first approach is a fully remote global workforce, but we help businesses with every possible remote-first scenario. If you are interested in learning more about our services and what we can do to help your business go remote-first, while saving you time and money, shoot us your questions.