Who could have predicted the disruption and change 2020 brought to the way we work? Now that we are starting to look ahead, past the loss and the lockdowns, it is time to plan for what is next.
One of the many considerations that needs to be addressed is retaining top talent. This is not a new issue, but employee retention looks different than it did in the pre-pandemic world. The perks and benefits talent looks for are not the same. Neither are the perks and benefits companies offer.
According to a recent Stanford University study, 42% of the workforce is currently working from home, accounting for more than two-thirds of economic activity. Meanwhile, a Pew Research study reported that nearly 90% of people who have been able to work from home during the pandemic never want to go back to the office full time. A PwC survey reported that the role of the office will be different. While most executives still are working out the details, only 13% of executives are ready to stay fully remote.
What began as a crisis response turned into a permanent shift. Virtual interactions gave company leaders rare insight into their employees' home lives. Companies recognized they needed to consider the whole person, not just the part that appeared at the office each day.
As a result, companies offered new perk-and-benefit packages that reflected the long-term nature of these changes. Some trends that are likely to be long term are emerging, including:
With traditional stress releases out of reach, the importance of self-care has become a pillar of wellness programs. Companies bring in speakers and present classes about topics from sleep and nutrition to physical activity to mindfulness. Some companies provide stipends for child care or the purchase of exercise equipment or classes.
We will have to wait and see how this plays out and how it affects recruitment and retention.
It remains to be seen how these trends will evolve as the pandemic winds down and people start returning to the workplace. What is clear is that companies need to start planning now. Much needs to be considered in the planning, including how to manage remote staff who feel they are on a different career track than are in-house staff. Budget is another important factor. For example, companies need to decide whether they want to go back to doing in-person trade shows or attending in-person conferences.
The best way for companies to prepare for a post-pandemic workplace is by creating and evaluating different scenarios, each with the same goal: retaining top talent. Businesses went into remote environments very quickly. Emerging from them will be much more difficult.