Envoy Reveals 80% of Executives Set Their Return-to-Office Policies Without Critical Workplace Data

Envoy published its latest and survey results on workplace trends. The survey, which polled over 1,100 company executives and workplace managers across five industries, explores how these two groups of leaders are now using data to make smarter, more informed decisions about their workplaces and policies.

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Whether hybrid or fully onsite, the world’s leading companies are struggling to confidently report what’s happening in their workplaces. The problem is the lack of accurate, easily accessible data. 52% of executives admit not being able to make a critical workplace decision because they lacked the necessary data to assess operational and real estate needs. Furthermore, 80% of the same executives confess that they would have approached the return to office (RTO) differently if they had access to accurate data.

Despite the challenge of accessing and optimizing data, both executives and workplace managers (leaders) agree that analytics is critical to the survival of their workplaces. Accurate data empowers them to make confident decisions about their company’s future. In fact, the majority are leaning into and investing more in data intelligence to predict future needs, boost operational efficiency, and stay compliant.

Here’s what we’ve learned:

Leaders are digging into their data to find out if return-to-office policies are working.

  • 88% of those surveyed work for organizations that have an in-office policy – and most are now measuring the success of this policy by delving into what their data is telling them.
  • To measure their success, 59% spend precious time aggregating workplace data from multiple sources, such as access control systems and sensors. Meanwhile, 31% save time by pulling pre-aggregated information from a single workplace platform. Only 7% use anecdotal feedback from employees.
  • The biggest takeaway: You can’t improve what you can’t measure. When asked how their businesses would benefit from more accessible and accurate data reporting, 73% of leaders said their companies would be better equipped to measure the success of workplace strategies. 66% mentioned improved layout/space management; 52% said they would be better positioned to plan daily workplace services (e.g., food, parking); nearly half (49%) said it would make real estate investment decisions easier, while 47% said it would help them prepare for mandated safety audits. Real-time reporting can help leaders pivot quickly to identify inefficiencies or double down on strategies that work.

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Data accuracy and duplication are the top frustrations.

  • What frustrates workplace managers the most is having to check their data for errors and duplications (67%). The second most common frustration is having to manually pull data from multiple sources (64%), followed by the time-consuming process (60%) and contacting vendors for data (48%).
  • Pulling data can be a tedious chore. Often analysts manually combine data from various sources into spreadsheets which then need to be checked for errors and redundancy. The work adds up. On average, it takes a day or more for nearly half (48%) of the workplace managers surveyed to produce an accurate report of what’s happening across their various locations.

Tracking workplace attendance is now universal despite perceived employee concerns.

  • Over half of the executives surveyed (56%) believe their employees have big concerns with companies monitoring their attendance. Despite this, nearly all (94%) companies track employee attendance – either by team or individual. Curiously, only 33% of workplace managers believe employees have major concerns with this type of tracking. One possible reason for the discrepancy: Executives might be more attuned to employee sentiment and external feedback.
  • Employee attendance (90%) tops the list of information that organizations collect, followed by data on deliveries (80%), meeting room utilization (68%), space usage (67%), and visitor foot traffic for compliance (58%).

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