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Future of Work

Why face-to-face is a must-have for your business

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The world is adapt­ing to hybrid work­ing. There are still some ben­e­fits from in-per­son work, as com­pa­nies find new ways to bring staff togeth­er. Basware’s CEO Klaus Ander­sen writes


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As we forge ahead into the end of 2021 the pan­dem­ic presents con­tin­ued uncer­tain­ty. Will organ­i­sa­tions that expand­ed their work­force into new geo­gra­phies due to vir­tu­al advances move towards a ful­ly remote work­force? Will busi­ness­es with a tra­di­tion­al men­tal­i­ty and a desire for an entire­ly in-per­son staff strug­gle to attract and retain tal­ent? Will work­ing from any­where be the face of the future?

There will con­tin­ue to be lots of unknowns, but one thing is cer­tain, there will be a neg­a­tive effect on employ­ees, com­pa­nies and even the glob­al econ­o­my if all com­pa­nies go to the extreme by get­ting rid of their phys­i­cal offices and switch to ful­ly remote work­ing.

Yes, there are absolute­ly ben­e­fits to a cer­tain degree of remote work­ing. Basware has long oper­at­ed suc­cess­ful­ly with its exec­u­tives and teams work­ing par­tial­ly remote­ly and geo­graph­i­cal­ly spread across 14 coun­tries and three con­ti­nents. The pan­dem­ic taught us how to do this in a set­up where every­one worked remote­ly: col­leagues, cus­tomers and part­ners. In a com­pa­ny like Basware, which has a glob­al foot­print, this has with­out a doubt fur­ther low­ered the bound­aries between geo­gra­phies. In that sense, it has made the world seem small­er by deliv­er­ing eas­i­er access to peo­ple around the world through remote col­lab­o­ra­tion tools. We have all come clos­er to each oth­er now, but in a sense, we have actu­al­ly moved far­ther apart from each oth­er.      

Per­son­al inter­ac­tion through a screen will nev­er be the same as in-per­son inter­ac­tions and the moti­va­tion to walk the extra mile for your col­leagues and the com­pa­ny will be on a com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent lev­el when you only inter­act with them on the screen. The rela­tion­ship becomes more dis­tanced and the feel­ing of being part of a team with col­leagues you want to help, con­tribute to and cel­e­brate achieve­ments togeth­er with, is much more dif­fi­cult to obtain. Human beings are herd ani­mals. That sense of belong­ing espe­cial­ly plays a huge role in com­pa­ny cul­ture, and sub­se­quent­ly in com­mit­ment and per­for­mance.

The war for tal­ent, or ‘the great attri­tion’ as some tend to call it, is rag­ing right now. It’s more impor­tant now than ever before to ensure that employ­ees feel a sense of belong­ing. What sense of ‘team’ can tru­ly be formed via a com­put­er screen? Humans can only build trust, loy­al­ty and con­nec­tion through in-per­son social inter­ac­tions – the chats in the ele­va­tor, in the hall­way between meet­ings, dur­ing team build­ings and every­thing in between.

Once estab­lished, those are invalu­able to the com­pa­ny because, paired with in-office work­ing, they breed effi­cien­cy and account­abil­i­ty. Noth­ing can replace two peo­ple look­ing eye-to-eye. Psy­chol­o­gists have con­duct­ed count­less stud­ies on the impor­tance and intri­ca­cies of facial expres­sions and body lan­guage. And those form the basis of soft skills. It’s imper­a­tive that we not deval­ue soft skills; just the oppo­site, we need to facil­i­tate envi­ron­ments where employ­ees can cul­ti­vate and build upon their soft skills and take cues from human behav­ior. It’s dif­fi­cult, for exam­ple, to read between the lines through a com­put­er screen or phone line. An employ­ee could inter­pret a dis­tract­ed look from a col­league in a video meet­ing as a look of dis­sat­is­fac­tion or dis­agree­ment.

It’s para­mount to a company’s suc­cess for employ­ees to have some face-to-face time. It real­ly comes into play dur­ing the ear­ly phas­es of a project or cam­paign – a time in which the team needs to brain­storm, debate the pros and cons, gain align­ment, devel­op a plan of attack, etc. Once the plan is for­mu­lat­ed and meet­ings become more sta­tus-based and fol­low-up-ori­ent­ed, the vir­tu­al world is just fine.

There may be indi­vid­u­als from both sides – C‑suite exec­u­tives and employ­ees – who dis­agree because they point to the suc­cess­es they’ve had since March 2020. But then and now are very dif­fer­ent. In the first year of the pan­dem­ic, a ful­ly remote work envi­ron­ment had a pos­i­tive effect on pro­duc­tiv­i­ty because, first, every­one was forced to move to remote work giv­en the extreme amount of uncer­tain­ty; with that uncer­tain­ty came a lot of inter­nal dri­ve and ded­i­ca­tion to make it work. Sec­ond, for the most part, teams and indi­vid­u­als were con­tin­u­ing larg­er ini­tia­tives ver­sus start­ing from scratch. But that was more than a year ago. Now, some of the iner­tia has evap­o­rat­ed and busi­ness­es again need face-to-face inter­ac­tions to effi­cient­ly start new projects, pro­grammes and activ­i­ties.

Like much in life, it’s all about cre­at­ing the right bal­ance. Busi­ness life will nev­er return to exact­ly the way it once was. There will be less busi­ness trav­el, but there shouldn’t be zero. Busi­ness­es should absolute­ly keep phys­i­cal offices. At Basware, employ­ees work­ing in their respec­tive offices three days a week is a good mid­dle ground – with nec­es­sary excep­tions. Plus, it is facil­i­tat­ing and encour­ag­ing social and team-build­ing activ­i­ties in small groups where appro­pri­ate.

For exam­ple, the Benelux team start­ed ‘walk and talk’ meet­ings to pro­mote cama­raderie in a fun, healthy and social­ly dis­tanced way. Employ­ees doc­u­ment­ed their strolls with self­ies and jour­naled a fun fact they learned about their col­leagues dur­ing their team meet­ings. They then pass that jour­nal along to the next group to read about the shared expe­ri­ence. They came up with this idea them­selves, indi­cat­ing the eager­ness of employ­ees to see one anoth­er.

As a glob­al com­pa­ny, the pos­si­bil­i­ties vary great­ly around the world with local health and safe­ty guide­lines.

Rarely in life is bal­ance a bad thing. When it comes to how we work togeth­er after the pan­dem­ic, the bal­ance between face-to-face and remote work­ing is the only sus­tain­able way to con­tin­ue to work effi­cient­ly and have fun while doing it.

For more, please vis­it basware.com


The world is adapting to hybrid working. There are still some benefits from in-person work, as companies find new ways to bring staff together. Basware's CEO Klaus Andersen writes

As we forge ahead into the end of 2021 the pandemic presents continued uncertainty. Will organisations that expanded their workforce into new geographies due to virtual advances move towards a fully remote workforce? Will businesses with a traditional mentality and a desire for an entirely in-person staff struggle to attract and retain talent? Will working from anywhere be the face of the future?

There will continue to be lots of unknowns, but one thing is certain, there will be a negative effect on employees, companies and even the global economy if all companies go to the extreme by getting rid of their physical offices and switch to fully remote working.

Future of Work

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