Leadership On The Run podcast

Leading in a hybrid work environment

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Leading in a hybrid work environment

 

Over the course of the past 18 months organisational leaders have been implementing changes to the way we work.

Firstly, they adapted to the working from home situation by providing employees with access to equipment, data, files, security, images, information, and documents. They also created systems guidelines and protocols for communications and IT security.

Secondly, leaders were active in providing well-being activities to maintain employee mental health. They offered virtual team events, apps and online training webinars and sessions.

Currently, in our business of developing future leaders and coaching executives, we are noticing a rise in requests for how to sustain team engagement, development, and productivity in the hybrid work environment.

Australian research has shown 78% of workers say they are more productive or just as productive when they work from home. 

Recruitment agencies have reported that organisations that advertise flexible workdays are attracting the most talent in today’s recruitment market.

A Price Waterhouse Coopers employee engagement survey determined most workers did not want to return to the office 5 days a week – employees are seeking a 3:2 or 4:1 model, this is what we call the hybrid work environment.

What does this hybrid workplace model mean for the leadership role?

A leader’s role is still to create shared meaning around organisational purpose and to be able to express it clearly and concisely. Without meaning (purpose) employees will flounder – not flourish.

They still need to create and maintain psychological safety for the team and part of that is implementing routine and consistency.

There are currently 161 collaboration software tools on the market. Find ones that work for your organisation and embrace them.

Here are some points of focus a leader of a hybrid work environment will need to consider.

  • Increasing virtual touch points that create and reinforce meaning and employee engagement.
  • Revise work into projects with SMART goals. Use measures that include quality, team involvement, deadlines, and development opportunities.
  • Increase engagement for motivation and wellbeing.
  • Increase relationship communications.
  • Do more personal scheduling (planning).

Examples of what successful leaders are doing.

Create rules of engagement with the team – e.g., communications to be fair, honest, open, virtual meetings attendees must turn video function to ON, etc

Hold 8-minute meetings – this leader and their team hold an 8 o’clock meeting (for 8 minutes every workday morning. The meeting is where tasks are delegated, questions are answered, and progress status is reported.

45 minute weekly virtual meeting – all team members attend (video must be ON), 30 seconds allocated to all for the giving of ‘High 5’ to another team member. (Someone is given time keeping duties to keep this on track. The whole meeting s dedicated to team member wellbeing – no WIP talks.

On a scale of 1-10 rate – how you are feeling today (this week) or status of project (1 is going no where and 10 is completed), access to resources, timeliness of communication responses, how you feel about being a member of this team, how your communications with your buddy are going etc.

Meetings are designated for specific purposes e.g., virtual meetings cover routine catch ups and f2f is for creative work.

A leader freed up their time on Zoom by allocating buddies within the team so they could check in n each other daily.

One leader opens zoom for 2 hours in the middle of the day for any of their team to ‘drop in’ (it’s the virtual equivalent of the open-door policy in the office.

One organisation gave leaders access to an app for recording coaching and development meetings.

 

What skills do I need as a leader in a hybrid workplace?

Mostly communication skills are required (your technical skills specific to your job are of course still relevant).

  • Relationship building & maintenance
  • Coaching
  • Facilitating
  • Setting goals
  • Influencing
  • Digital
  • Planning/scheduling

The first 3 are particularly relevant at present. If you have the skills to build and maintain relationships (think rapport, trust, feedback, empathy) coach others and facilitate an engaging meeting you have the means to express purpose and meaning, engage individuals and groups around a common goal, monitor and measure progress and quality and sustain a productive team environment.

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