In a recent Wall Street Journal article, “How to Rally a Jittery Workforce Back at the Office,” a creative agency exec described some of the dynamics he was witnessing as his firm’s employees returned to the workplace.
The exec describes his coworkers’ uneasiness about being back in close proximity. He describes hearing audible sighs as he walks past workmates’ cubicles. Are they despondent? Are they feeling trapped in the office after a year-plus of being away? He doesn’t say. What his story does suggest is that we may be in for a rough transition going back to the office, just as it was a rough transition learning to work remotely during the pandemic.
At first glance, it might seem like returning to the office is no big deal. After all, that’s where we all spent years of our lives prior to Covid. What’s the big deal?
But, psychologically, there might be more to this transition that meets the eye. For many employees, returning to the office will represent a major change of routine and a not-insignificant loss of autonomy. It may also involve feelings of separation from loved ones (e.g., parents who had extended time with their children) coupled with feelings of a loss of safety.
These misgivings are echoed by recent surveys, including one by Envoy, which found that two-thirds of US employees are anxious about the return to the office.
One factor that managers need to consider is that as employees make the transition back to the office, they will naturally face stresses that weren’t present even during the pandemic. For starters, by leaving their home office, employees are giving up control over their hourly schedule. Secondly, if the company doesn’t require all employees to be vaccinated, some employees may be worried about their safety in the workplace.
Even though it was difficult to juggle personal, family and work needs all at once during the pandemic, there is an entirely new stress to be found in having to return to the old ways – the pre-pandemic normal, in which home and work were separated and employees often had to make hard choices about work vs. personal priorities.
It’s no secret that the reason some managers prefer the office over remote work is that employees know they are expected to focus almost exclusively on work while at work. So, during this transition period, some employees – especially those whose employers don’t allow for hybrid work – will have to get reacquainted with that expectation, which could be jarring. For the employees who actually thrived working from home, returning to the office might feel downright oppressive.
For employees at companies that have adopted a hybrid workplace, there may a different set of transition issues at play. Both managers and employees will have some big questions that need to be resolved, such as:
While there is plenty to be said about the difficulties of transition, we should point out that for many employees, a return to the office – even just for a portion of the week – will be a much welcome change and could be a mental health boost for many of us.