remote work
Editorial

Survey Says: Hybrid Working Is A Win-Win For Employers

3 minute read
Adi Gaskell avatar
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Research from Stanford's Nick Bloom found a hybrid work arrangement benefitted both employers and employees.

While you'd think the pandemic provided more than enough evidence as to the merits, or otherwise, of remote and hybrid working, the last few months have seen a growing number of employers demanding workers return to the office.

While some of these decisions may not based on any proof one way or the other in mind, the most comprehensive dose of evidence is now available via the latest research from Stanford's Nick Bloom.

Everyone Wins With Hybrid Work

The study, which analyzed over 1,600 workers in a large online travel company, found that hybrid schedules tend to benefit both employees and managers.

Indeed, Bloom found that not only were those who had a hybrid work schedule productive and engaged, they were also promoted as often as their office-based peers. Indeed, so effective was hybrid working that resignations were 33% lower among hybrid workers, with this especially popular among women, non-managers and those with long commutes.

"The results are clear: Hybrid work is a win-win-win for employee productivity, performance, and retention," wrote Bloom.

Related Article: Worker's Reject Dell's RTO Push. What Comes Next?

Hybrid Work Shows No Signs of Going Away

The findings are especially notable given that roughly 100 million workers worldwide now split their time between home and the office each week. Many of these hybrid workers are professionals like lawyers, accountants, marketers and software engineers, most with a college degree or higher.

Yet, remote work has faced criticism from well-known business leaders. Elon Musk, head of Tesla, SpaceX and X (formerly Twitter), and Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, argue that the downsides of remote work outweigh the benefits. They say that training, mentoring, innovation and company culture suffer when employees are not in the office five days a week.

Critics often mix up hybrid work with fully remote work. Most studies on remote work focus on employees who never go to an office, often in jobs like customer support or data entry. These studies have mixed results, typically leaning towards negative, suggesting that fully remote work has problems when not managed well.

"This study offers powerful evidence for why 80% of U.S. companies now offer some form of remote work," Bloom explained. "And for why the remaining 20% of firms that don't are likely paying a price."

Related Article: Why Hybrid Work Won't Stick

Quantifying the Benefits of Hybrid

Hybrid working was a fundamentally new concept for the travel company that Bloom studied. Indeed, in 2021, when the hybrid experiment started, there was no official policy on hybrid working.

In total, nearly 400 managers and over 1,200 professionals participated in the experiment. Participants were selected at random based on their birthdays, with those falling on odd-numbered days working from home two days a week, and those falling on even-numbered days coming in every day. Of the participants, the majority were in their mid-30s, with around half having children.

The researchers found that hybrid work benefits both employees and companies by analyzing company data and worker surveys, including performance reviews and promotion records for up to two years after the experiment. Trip.com’s thorough performance reviews assess employees’ contributions to innovation, leadership and mentoring.

The researchers also compared the quality and quantity of computer code written by the Trip.com software engineers who worked hybrid with those who worked in the office full-time.

Related Podcast: Gitlab's Betsy Bula on How to Make Remote Work

Unearthed Misconceptions, Positive Outcomes 

The study found that hybrid work did not affect productivity or career advancement, and it greatly improved retention rates. However, there were some nuances: resignations dropped only among non-managers, while managers were equally likely to quit regardless of their work arrangement.

The study also identified a number of misconceptions held by both managers and employees about hybrid work. For instance, they found that many workers, and especially women, were hesitant about enrolling in the trial because they felt they would be negatively judged for not being in the office five days per week.

This was perhaps born out by the belief among managers that working remotely would harm the productivity of workers. Thankfully, managers shifted their mindset once they saw the evidence to the contrary. Bloom believes the findings are a timely reminder that many of the fears about hybrid work are not justified.

Learning Opportunities

"If managed right, letting employees work from home two or three days a week still gets you the level of mentoring, culture-building and innovation that you want," he concluded. "From an economic policymaking standpoint, hybrid work is one of the few instances where there aren't major trade-offs with clear winners and clear losers. There are almost only winners."

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About the Author
Adi Gaskell

I currently advise the European Institute of Innovation & Technology, am a researcher on the future of work for the University of East Anglia, and was a futurist for the sustainability innovation group Katerva, as well as mentoring startups through Startup Bootcamp. I have a weekly column on the future of work for Forbes, and my writing has appeared on the BBC and the Huffington Post, as well as for companies such as HCL, Salesforce, Adobe, Amazon and Alcatel-Lucent. Connect with Adi Gaskell:

Main image: Meri Sorgaard
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