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Month: December 2021

C is for Collaboration

The ABC’s of Workstyle

This is third in a short series attempting to decode hybrid workplace jargon to foster a more nuanced discussion on future work capabilities, workstyles and workplace in a post-pandemic world.  “C is for Collaboration” explains the importance of understanding the wide range of collaborative activities and specifically what valuable collaboration means for your people.


Collaboration is Not One Thing!

The “C word” was the inspiration for this decoding workplace jargon series, as ‘collaboration’ has been one of the most overused and misunderstood workplace terms in recent years!  I admit I am guilty of using it as well, and for a lot of people it’s a ‘catch-all’ word that encompasses a range of activities.  A recent HBR article[1] positing that we spend 85% of our time on collaboration drew a lot of critical online debate regarding what is defined as collaboration, with one colleague summing it up perfectly:

‘collaboration’ is organisational “loosey goosey language for any old interaction”[2].

However, it’s also become a highly obfuscating term for an enormous range of interactive activities we engage in as part of our work.  ‘Office for collaboration, home for focus’ has become the catchcry of post-pandemic workplace strategy.  This suggests it’s very similar across teams, organisations and cultures and can be addressed through a few sofas, team tables and ‘casual settings’ that look good on paper but often lack intent.

It suggests an intellectual laziness within business (expect blowback!) that we don’t sufficiently articulate the complexity of human interactions that are part of value-creating work.

If we cannot describe, how can we understand, if we cannot understand how can we design intentionally for these activities and behaviours?

What is Real Collaboration?

The Cambridge dictionary defines collaboration as “the situation of two or more people working together to create or achieve the same thing” 

The dictionary’s ‘SMART Vocabulary’ cloud shows almost 100 related words and phrases including accord, collectively, confluence, cooperative, gang, pairwork, teamwork, synergistic, tandem, together, unity.

I could go on, but the point is that by increasingly using ‘collaboration’ as a one size fits all term we ignore the myriad forms of interpersonal connections that create or achieve something together.

These may include (but not be limited to) collaborative activities such as mentoring and coaching, side by side teamwork, problem solving, decision-making, brainstorming/ideation, providing feedback, reviewing things together, co-creating things, interviewing, requirements gathering and briefing, ideating, voting/assessing alternatives, having a discussion or debate, planning together.  All these interactions have the potential to create or achieve something – which of these collaborations are most meaningful and important to you?

Key future of work activities for leaders and their teams
Key future of work activities for leaders and their teams

These interactions are not necessarily optimally or only done face to face in the office. Since the 1970s researchers who have studied physical proximity (the distance employees need to travel to engage in a face-to-face interaction) have disagreed on the question of whether it facilitates or inhibits collaboration[3].

The reality is that many collaborative activities migrate asynchronously from face to face to digital and back again or are a synchronous blend.

To quote a colleague who knows his collaboration data “think of your office as one big device that connects people. Just because people are not there doesn’t mean they can’t be connected.”[4]

However, in designing offices to support ‘collaboration’ the very different needs across the spectrum of interactions, activities, behaviours and mindsets are often overlooked.

For example, when we are coaching or giving feedback to a team member, how do we want to be positioned – face to face or side by side?  Do we want to be sitting or standing and how close together should we be?  How important is it for the receiver to feel psychologically safe so the feedback is truly absorbed?  Do we want a more formal or relaxed environment and will white noise help or hinder the flow of conversation?  What impact does the journey to this destination have on each person’s energy levels and mental state?

Optimise for Collaborative Diversity

As I suggested in the previous post in this series “B is for Behaviour”, we would do well to spend more time on work analysis to understand what collaboration means within an organisation.

Ask yourself, what types of interaction are most common and what are most valuable?  What don’t we support effectively now?

Take time to consider these questions in the context of the future of work capabilities and behaviours that are important to your business.  Think about how best to support these specific activities wherever they occur, allowing for the likelihood of synchronous face to face and digital interaction when planning the physical workplace settings.

This is not an argument against multi-use, flexible settings that can accommodate a range of activities, rather it’s a call to design those spaces within the broader context of a workplace that is optimised to support the rich diversity of collaborative activities that will create the most value in future.

 

If this feels worth exploring further, I’d welcome the conversation.

Caroline M Burns


References

[1] “Collaboration Overload Is Sinking Productivity” in Harvard Business Review, September 07 2021

[2] LinkedIn post comment by Geoff Marlow, 13 September 2021

[3] “Covid-19 has forced a radical shift in working habits” in The Economist, September 10 2020 edition

[4] “Interview with Cisco: Creating a digitally inclusive workplace” by Axiom, 2021

Flexible / Hybrid Work, Future of Work

Bkg Light Cream

D is for Desk-sharing

The ABC’s of Workstyle

This is a short series attempting to decode hybrid workstyle jargon to foster a more nuanced discussion on future work capabilities, workstyles and workplace.  Part 4 “D is for Desk-sharing” focuses on the need to focus on what workstyles and behaviours we want, rather than what type of desk-assignment we want.


There has been a lot of noise in the press in Singapore and Australia over the past 12 months about the dangers of desk-sharing, often referred to as ‘hotdesking’ or ‘activity-based working’ (ABW) – and this is before we further confuse the issue by talking about hybrid, remote, or telework.

My first concern with this dialogue in both the media and our industry is with the terminology.  It is outdated, inaccurate, open to misinterpretation, and hence skews the discussion of both positive and negative outcomes of a mobile workplace policy.

These labels hinder rather than help us have a constructive conversation about evolving workstyles and appropriate workplace design responses.

The Cambridge English Dictionary defines ‘hot-desking’ as “a way of saving office space in which workers do not have their own desk and are only given a desk when they need it.”   Wikipedia calls it an “office organisation system.”   Hmmm, sounds like an attractive employee value proposition doesn’t it?

‘Hotdesking’ is a Taylorist concept which emerged in the early nineties (a long time ago in office-years!), predominantly within sales companies and accounting firms who had significant numbers of staff working off-site for days or weeks at a time.

The term has little relevance to current practices involving some type of non-, or neighbourhood-assigned desking, supported by other shared spaces in the office, and off-site facilities in so called ‘third places’, at home or in satellite & co-working centres.

And I can’t get my head around the term ‘activity-based working’ – isn’t ALL work ‘activity-based’?

Google the term and you will find hundreds of references with little consensus as to what it really means, beyond generally supporting collaboration, choice and flexibility for employees.  I say this with absolute respect to Veldhoen + Company who claim to have invented the concept of ABW, and are justifiably recognised as a global leader in this field.  To their credit, Veldhoen promote ‘ABW’  as being much more than trendy interiors and open work areas, and ultimately about facilitating collaboration, engagement and innovation when properly designed and implemented.

D is for Desk-sharing
D is for Desk-sharing – avoid jargon and focus on what matters to your organisation

Whether desks are allocated to individuals or shared is not necessarily a mandatory requirement for ‘ABW’ (although it’s a fundamental premise of ‘hotdesking’).  You only need to look at the incredibly diverse environments created for companies such as Google, LinkedIn and Facebook – employers that eschew desk-sharing – to understand that these workplaces are specifically designed to promote collaboration, community, connection and innovation, all ostensibly goals of ‘ABW’.  Do these qualify as ‘activity-based’ environments or not?

My second concern with the discourse on ‘hotdesking’ and ‘ABW’ is that we don’t seem to have moved on from a fairly polarised discussion of the pros and cons, as if these would apply to any business trialling more mobile and flexible workstyles.  Given the number of organisations in Asia and Australia who have trod the ‘ABW’ path in recent years,

…we should have ample data as to what works and why, and what doesn’t work under certain circumstances.

So it’s disappointing to see that there is still a lot of emphasis on images of brightly coloured, hip interior spaces featuring artfully-placed collaborative furniture and cosy cafes, rather than a rhetoric-free assessment of an ‘activity based’ approach to workplace design that has been evolving for decades.

This concern has caused me to reflect on the successful evolution and implementation of BlueWork for American Express in Singapore in 2010, when I led the Asia region for a leading corporate workplace strategy and design firm.  At the time this project broke new ground within American Express globally.  It was also one of the first comprehensive ‘activity-based’ workplaces in Singapore, recognised by winning the International Property Award for Best Office Interior in 2011.

In an interview with IndesignLIVE the same year, I explained that while the design principles for the project are similar to most other ‘ABW’ workplaces in the region,

the strategy was deliberately aligned with the company’s culture, structure, workstyles and technology.

This people-led approach is evident in the key role human resources play with management in assessing employee workstyles and suitability, and in the commitment to pre-move training that guides employees and managers through the challenges that might accompany the transition.

This recount is not to suggest that this project was a best practice example of desk-sharing in a workplace. Instead, the takeaway here is that discussion of the pros and cons of desk-sharing, ‘ABW’, ‘hotdesking’ or ‘hybrid’ relies on misleading labels that may homogenise perceptions of workstyle policies and practices, rather than illuminate the diversity of contexts, applications and outcomes, in order to inform business and design choices.  

 

If this feels worth exploring further, I’d welcome the conversation.

Caroline M Burns

Flexible / Hybrid Work, Productivity and Value-Creation