Missing That Spark: New Hybrid Working World Affecting Employee Learning, Team Spirit and Creativity as We Head Into 2021

A new survey by Actus, the UK provider of the award-winning Unified People Performance Platform and HR Uprising Podcast, has uncovered a number of prevailing concerns for employees. These centre around lack of opportunities to collaborate, connect and learn as informal face-to-face interactions are restricted due to Covid-19 enforced remote working.

HR Technology News: TecHRseries Interview with Sachin Gupta, Co-founder and CEO at HackerEarth

Their research carried out in October 2020, before the second lockdown showed that a substantial 63% of respondents were not expecting to return to the office full-time for the foreseeable future. As the novelty of sustained remote working wears off, the long-term effects of sporadic in-person interactions with team members are starting to appear with virtual working potentially inhibiting informal learning, engagement and creativity.

Can this be addressed by formalising learning?

It seems that formalising learning is quite a long way from enabling a learning culture with 45% of respondents considering training to be simply ‘tick-box compliance’ and only 5% describing their culture as having a sophisticated 70/20/10 approach. When asked whether they had a learning culture in their organisation, 79% selected the option of ‘not really’ or ‘only in pockets’. The results show that companies are yet to have effective (remote) learning management systems in place that can accommodate for the flexible face-to-face and virtual world they are now inhabiting(Actus).

HR Technology News: Programmatic Job Advertising Leader Joveo Launches Industry-First Cookieless Candidate Tracking…

Missing colleagues stifling creativity / challenges looking ahead

Looking ahead to the next set of performance challenges in a semi-virtual world, most respondents highlighted ‘a lack of informal collaboration/contact with fellow colleagues affecting information sharing or creativity’ (63%) and ‘a lack of team ethos/spirit’ (60%) as the two most pressing concerns. Unsurprisingly, these responses are joined by nearly two thirds (65%) viewing ‘isolation & disengagement’ as the biggest obstacle that will come with the new hybrid world of work. Factors involving the more pragmatic side of working life were less of a worry, with 22% apprehensive about disjointed availability/working hours, 26% concerned by a loss of productivity or focus, and 35% fearing a lack of talent visibility would affect their development and career progression.

HR Technology News: Sun Life Partners With Plansource To Deliver Superior Benefits Experience With Enhanced Digital…

Write in to psen@itechseries.com to learn more about our exclusive editorial packages and programs.